Commit graph

976 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
33a19c404b Structure-Change: introduce a common accessor interface
...to solve the problem with interwoven nested ctor invocation.
This interface also promises to help with nested invcations,
without being overly generic.
2019-12-20 20:06:26 +01:00
c5bffa21f4 Structure-Change: introduce new ViewHook interface into TimelineLayout
...with the goal to supersede the tricky DisplayFrame ctor closure used for this purpose
2019-12-20 00:21:31 +01:00
cef7917d8e Diff-Listener: finished and unit test pass (closes: #1206) 2019-12-15 21:40:09 +01:00
9f3fe8a885 Diff-Framework: add clean-up hook to diff-application
Our diff language requires a diff to handle the complete contents of the target.
Through this clean-up hook this is now in fact enforced.

The actual reason for adding this however was that I need to ensure
listeners are triggered
2019-12-15 15:06:04 +01:00
3e1d0036ed Diff-Listener: resolve template instantiation errors
As it turned out, the reason was a missing move-ctor.
The base of the whole DSL-Stack, TreeMutator, is defined MoveOnly,
and this is also the intended use (build an anonymous instance
through the DSL and move it into the work buffer prior to diff application)

However, C++ does *cease to define* a move ctor implicitly,
whenever /one of the "big five" is defined explicitly/.

So Detector4StructuralChanges was the culprit, it defined a dtor,
but failed to define the move ctor explicitly.


So.... well, this did cost me several hours to track down,
yet I still rather do not want to write all those ctors explicitly all the time,
and so I am still in favour of implicitly generated ctors, even if they hurt sometimes.
2019-12-15 13:54:29 +01:00
854f4eca58 Diff-Listener: investigate weird template errors
with the new decorator layer, we suddenly trigger a chain of template instantiation errors.
At first sight, they are almost undecipherable, yet after some experimentation, it becomes clear
that they relate down to the base class (TreeMutator), which is defined MoveOnly

This seems to indicate that, at some point in the call chain, we are
digressing from the move-construction scheme and switch over to copy construction,
which in the end failst (and shall fail).

Inconclusive, to be investigated further
2019-12-15 04:12:20 +01:00
a33e236630 Diff-Listener: define API 2019-12-14 23:35:16 +01:00
806d569e06 Diff-Framework: resolve lurking problems with specific STL containers
basically the solution was a bit too naive and assumed everything is similar to a vector.
It is not, and this leads to some insidious problems with std::map, which hereby
are resolved by introducing ContainerTraits
2019-12-14 01:29:21 +01:00
3321e5bc6b Diff-Listener: need a really basic test
All of the existing "simple" tests for the »Diff Framework« are way to much low-level;
they might indeed be elementary, but not introductory and simple to grasp.
We need a very simplistic example to show off the idea of mutation by diff,
and this simple example can then be used to build further usage test cases.

My actual goal for #1206 to have such a very basic usage demonstration and then
to attach a listener to this setup, and verify it is actually triggered.

PS: the name "GenNodeBasic_test" is somewhat pathetic, this test covers a lot
of ground and is anything but "basic". GenNode in fact became a widely used
fundamental data structure within Lumiera, and -- admittedly -- the existing
implementation might be somewhat simplistic, while the whole concept as such
is demanding, and we should accept that as the state of affairs
2019-12-12 23:41:26 +01:00
c86f914915 Structure-Change: re-order entity naming
ViewHookable -> ViewHook
ViewHook -> ViewHooked
2019-12-12 17:02:24 +01:00
c501a38590 Structure-Change: fix test after refactoring / add lifecycle warning
now the lifecycle of widget and hook are tightly interwoven.
Indeed the test uncovered a situation where a call into the
already destroyed Canvas might halt the application.
2019-12-09 01:24:51 +01:00
0a20d18242 Structure-Change: implement the changed API and memory layout
NOTE: 2 test failures
2019-12-08 23:57:43 +01:00
99e367f33b Structure-Change: draft other API for hooking up widgets
...basically it occurred to me that in practice we will never have to deal
with isolated ViewHooks, rather with widgets-combinded-with-a-hook.
So the idea is to combine both into a template ViewHooked<W>
2019-12-08 21:09:25 +01:00
ffcac2ea1e Structure-Change: implement a simplistic implementation of re-ordering
...verified by the rather conceptual unit test
2019-12-06 23:19:09 +01:00
305ff8e6cc Structure-Change: draft API for re-ordering attached widgets
basically this attempts to work around an "impedance mismatch" caused by relying on Lumiera's Diff framework.
Applying a diff might alter the structural order of components, without those componets
being aware of the change. If especially those components are attached into some
UI layout, or otherwise delegate to display widgets, we need a dedicated mechanism
to reestablish those display elements in proper order after applying the change.

The typical examples is a sequence of sub-Tracks, which might have been reordert due
to applying rules down in the Steam Layer. The resulting diff will propagate the
new order of sub-Tracks up into the UI, yet now all of the elaborate layout and
space allocation done in the presentation code needs to be adjusted or even
recomputed to accomodate the change.
2019-12-06 21:53:43 +01:00
8ba315561f Structure-Change: in-depth analysis of design alternatives
...leading to the conclusion to use this as a design pattern rather,
without trying to evolve it into a fundamental backbone framework
2019-12-05 22:25:48 +01:00
3bedbd1dff Structure-Change: attempt to solve a problem with cross-type access 2019-12-02 00:35:17 +01:00
ed409c3570 Structure-Change: exapnd on the idea of a generic Visitor
...to form a single framework for view attachment.
Obviously, we have two quite distinct cases to cover
- attaching a widget onto a canvas
- hooking a widget as subtree into a grid/tree control
2019-12-02 00:35:10 +01:00
1bcdf9860c Structure-Change: continue design/analysis 2019-12-02 00:34:41 +01:00
c573630ac1 Structure-Change: draft a design based on ViewHook / ViewHookable
By applying a Diff, the children of some timeline element (track) may be re-ordered.
This imposes specific problems, since these elements hold onto slave-Widgets,
which are already attached into some elaborated and nested widget structure.
To keep complexity under control, we can not allow the TrackPresenter to have
any knowledge regarding the implementation structure of these target widgets.

Thus I am pondering the idea to represent that relation as an abstracted ViewHook link
2019-12-02 00:34:20 +01:00
37d2e52c1e ClipDisplay: also verify invocation of widget relocation via ViewHook
...obviously this is just a dummy implementation and serves only to verify the design
2019-11-08 21:37:09 +01:00
bdf3351f55 ClipDisplay: basic implementation of ViewHook helper 2019-11-08 20:49:37 +01:00
bf283e8843 QA: check for possible misalignment through placement new (-> #1204) 2019-11-08 01:14:36 +01:00
f9d8f6eb55 ClipDisplay: draft desired properties of the ViewHook helper
...which serves to solve the problem with Canvas access.
Basically we do not want each and every Clip widget to be aware of the concrete canvas implementation widget;
and in addition, automated removal of widgets from the Canvas seems desirable
2019-09-30 02:49:02 +02:00
7c7b910545 ClipDisplay: plot a structure for connecting ClipWidgets with the display canvas 2019-09-29 01:32:34 +02:00
03c358fe86 Timeline: squeeze in some test/diagnostics code to inject a button onto each track
This is dummy/test/diagnostics code and should be removed when the track display code is complete!
It can be activated by sending a "mark"-Message via the UI-Bus, towards the
Timeline element to be tested (Tip: use the same ID as used when injecting
the Timeline via the TestControl Dialog box). When receiving this message
(asynchronously), the TimelineControler asks each nested TrackPresnter
to inject a Button with the corresponding track name onto the BodyCanvasWidget.

This allows us to verify the coordinate calculation and size allocation --
and indeed, the numbers are not yet correct (TODO)
2019-09-07 19:24:54 +02:00
cae013c4f4 Timeline: store current track start coordinates while calculating allocation
admittedly this is a bit sketchy, but I don't have a better framework to hinge upon right now.
Thus we store the vertical start coordinates and the offset of the content area
as a side effect, while calculating the TrackProfile
2019-09-07 17:31:58 +02:00
4785ff8caa Timeline: integrate support for a margin on the timeline content
...which has the nice additional effect of exposing box-shadow on the outside of the content area too.
Thus the content area now behaves equivalent to the rulers, and adjacent
content space of simple tracks without rulers and nesting can be slightly
offset from each other through a margin in CSS
2019-09-07 17:31:53 +02:00
fa4a9014a1 Timeline: nail the problem with calculating overall vertical space
In the end, I used the profile building pass to also calculate and sum up the vertical offsets.
Seems to be the only sane approach to get really precise values, since adjacent
upwards slopes can be combined at various places (and I do not want to use the
actual drawing code for this calculation)
2019-08-29 23:02:44 +02:00
4d2766963b Timeline: size allocation is not yet correct...
need to investigate and probably need to store per track offset values
already while building the track profile. The primary reason for the
observed discrepancy seems to be the rather flexible combination of
slope borders.
2019-08-29 16:19:47 +02:00
360209a381 Timeline: verify visible track structure (and fix a bug with header placement) 2019-08-29 16:19:40 +02:00
737505979b Timeline: also observe additional space for decorations added via CSS 2019-08-23 03:56:38 +02:00
346b5ae769 Timeline: now settle the drawing code with the insights gained thus far
Especially note the tricks we need to play in order to allow for (limited) usage of CSS3 box-shadows.
The reason is, all these CSS3 effects are rendered in one shot and combinend on the StyleContext::render_background() call
Thus we need to ensure that the background is properly aligned with the frames
2019-08-23 03:04:22 +02:00
fc5eaf857c Timeline: find a workaround to cause the Box to reflow the rulerCanvas
seemingly, the Box with PACK_SHRINK allocates a zero height to the rulerCanvas initally,
which is correct at that point, since the widgets are not yet realised.
However, when we later set_size() on the rulerCanvas, the enclosing Box should reflow.
It does indeed if the child widget is a button or something similar, however,
somehow this reflowing does not work when we set_size on the canvas.

A workaround is to place a new set_size_request().

TODO: do this more precisely, and only on the rulerCanvas. To the contrary,
the mainCanvas is placed into a scolling-pane and thus does not need a size-Request.
Moreover, the latter automatically communicates with the hadjustment() / vadjustment() of
the enclosing scrollbars.
2019-08-22 17:34:32 +02:00
2390385dc5 Timeline: implement function to set the drawing canvas size
as can be verified with the debugger, it sets the correct sizes now.
And it is called only once (unless the content size actually changes).

TODO: however, the visible display of the GTK widgets is not adjusted
2019-08-21 19:13:55 +02:00
8c0b3258cb Timeline: investigate details of CSS box-shadow and dawing strategy
- decide upon the actual drawing strategy
- document our approach chosen thus far
- add a new function to fill in the overall canvas size (TODO)
2019-08-21 17:48:25 +02:00
81253cb152 Timeline: some analysis and planning regarding space allocation 2019-08-08 19:08:04 +02:00
a508ad751f Investigation: clarify handling of CSS3 box-shadow for custom drawing
- CSS3 effects like box-shadow are applied with the StyleContext::render_background() function
  * first, an outset box-shadow is rendered _outside_ the box given as parameter to `render_background()`
  * then the box is filled with the background colour
  * and last, an inset box-shadow is rendered _inside_ the area of a would-be border,
    without rendering the border itself.
  * consequently we can not shade the border itself and we can not shade the content
2019-08-08 19:08:04 +02:00
7bf7c51375 Investigation: inconclusive further research (context_save/restore)
Indeed I had missed to connect the new "free standing" StyleContext to
some Gdk::Screen, typically the default screen (connected to the current
top level window). But seemingly this was not really necessary, since,
somehow magically, the style context must have connected itself to some
screen, otherwise it wouldn't be able to access the CSS cascade.

Anyhow, fixing this omission does not resolve our problem.
Nor does any combination of re-connecting, invalidating etc.

I poked around in the GTK (C) code a lot, but could not spot any obvious
missing initialisation step. To much magic around here. Without massive
debugging into GTK internals, I don't see any way to further this
investigation. And, moreover there is a viable workaround
(namely to set and remove the classes explicitly, which works as intended)

I posted a question on Stackoverflow and for now
I'll file this topic as "inconclusive"
https://stackoverflow.com/q/57342478
2019-08-08 19:08:04 +02:00
8824be440a Investigation: integrate findings thus far into our timeline drawing code
DONE
 - can now control the border size through a set of modifier classes

OPEN
 - but context_save()/restore() does not work; seem to loose all styling
 - not clear how to deal with CSS3 effects like box-shadow
2019-08-03 16:41:46 +02:00
06aa5c4c8c Investigation: get the border resizing to work
...as it turns out, a problem with Cascading prevented the additional classes to become effective
2019-08-03 15:45:36 +02:00
0280000854 Investigation: setup a minimal standalone GTK application
...to find out about GTK's implementation of some aspects of CSS
through Gtk::StyleContext and friends

Basically this is a clone of the existing gtk-canvas-experiment application
2019-08-01 00:02:56 +02:00
e6e68e2e68 Timeline: investigate options to build a suitable ramp style
...somehow does not yet work as intended...

- unable to control the border-width from code
- Gtk::StyleContext::add_class(name) does not seem to have any effect
2019-07-30 19:20:58 +02:00
b5c2009933 Timeline: first attempt at drawing ramps and borders
...does not work out as expected
 - frames are painted solid, not inset/outset
 - unable to manipulate the border width from code
2019-07-20 17:39:49 +02:00
b2c2787ddc Timeline: populate additional Style-Advice for nested ruler tracks 2019-07-20 01:24:17 +02:00
eca09e3ab5 Timeline: work out how Ruler tracks can be managed 2019-07-20 01:24:17 +02:00
d1e2ddc56e Timeline: refactor common drawing code into an abstract baseclass 2019-07-15 00:25:08 +02:00
713178aecd Timeline: better save the number of pinned elements as dedicated field
...within the Profile object, instead of sneaking this info into the prelude verb
2019-07-15 00:06:59 +02:00
ec50407167 Timeline: start implementing some bits of the drawing code
Use a "catchy" style definition with lime background to make the drawing visible
2019-07-14 17:53:21 +02:00
bc4f7604a2 Timeline: draft a scheme to use custom class names within CSS selectors
We can add our custom classes to custom widgets, and we can set the
widget name, which can be used as #id selector from CSS

Unfortunately we can not set the main CSS node name for CustomWidgets defined through GTKmm (C++)
The latter is only possible when deriving the custom widget in plain-C, which is quite tedious.
On a second thought, this limitation is not so severe as it might seem, because
most of the time you actually do *not* want to change the CSS node name,
because you want to match against existing rules in the theme (e.g. box, or paned)

The actual case here would have been an exception to this rule, since here
it would be nice to anchor the whole custom timeline drawing in an "body.timeline" element


NOTE: Current state for the selector path is now:

window.background box.vertical box[2/3].horizontal widget[2/2] widget paned.vertical widget box.vertical notebook[1/1].frame paned.horizontal.timeline-page box.vertical.timeline.timeline-body fork.timeline
2019-07-13 21:04:33 +02:00
826df93955 Timeline: publish virtual CSS path and style context via Advice system
...and perform the initialisation once, when attaching the first timeline to the UI
Now our code produces the following Gtk::WidgetPath (note the last node, which our code added)

window:backdrop:dir-ltr.background box:backdrop:dir-ltr.vertical box:backdrop:dir-ltr[2/3].horizontal widget:backdrop:dir-ltr[2/2] widget:backdrop:dir-ltr paned:backdrop:dir-ltr.vertical widget:backdrop:dir-ltr box:backdrop:dir-ltr.vertical notebook:backdrop:dir-ltr[1/1].frame paned:backdrop:dir-ltr.horizontal box:backdrop:dir-ltr.vertical fork.timeline
2019-07-13 18:04:02 +02:00
6b4bf0a6ea Library: allow to check if Advice was explicitly given
For context: The »Advice System« was coined a long time ago, in 2010,
based on the vague impression that it might be useful for that kind of application
we are about to build here. And, as can be expected, none of the usage situations
envisioned at that time was brought to bear. Non the less, the facility came in
handy at times, precisely because it is cross-cutting and allows to pass
information without imposing any systematic relationship between the
communication partners.

And now we've got again such a situation.
The global style manager in the UI has to build a virtual CSS path,
which is needed by drawing code somewhere deep down, and we absolutely
do not want to pass a reference to the style manager over 20 recursive calls.

The alternatives would be
 (1) to turn the style manager into a public service
 (2) to have a static access function somewhere
 (3) to use a global variable.
For rationale, (1) would be overblown, because we do not actually request
a service to do work for us, rather we need some global piece of information.
(2) would be equivalent to (1), just more confusing. And (3) is basically
what the Advice system does, with the added benefit of a clear-cut service
access point and a well defined lifecycle.

This changeset adds the ability to check if actual Advice has been published,
which allows us to invoke the (possibly expensive) GTK path building and
style context building code only once.
2019-07-13 17:00:23 +02:00
d5cbeab2d8 Timeline: GTK-Code to construct a "virtal" CSS path (see #1168)
This code was cooked up by following the example of gtk_widget_path_append_for_widget()
See gtkwidget.c, 16413
2019-07-13 00:59:05 +02:00
60d28fea2c Timeline: establish a way to pass a StyleContext via Advice system
- at some (yet to be defined) location, a virtual WidgetPath is constructed
  and used to build a Gtk::StyleContext in accordance to the curren CSS

- within the drawing routine, we use Lumiera's Advice-System to access this info
2019-07-12 23:58:25 +02:00
ab90d9c71d Functions-Commands: discard the ability to compare functors for equivalence (closes #294)
evil hack R.I.P
2019-06-23 19:45:30 +02:00
94edb5de86 BufferMetadata: likewise abandon use of function comparison for buffer handlers
The existing implementation created a Buffer-Type based on various traits,
including the constructor and destructor functions for the buffer content.
However, this necessitates calculating the hash_value of a std::function,
which (see #294) is generally not possible to implement.

So with this changeset we now store an additional identity hash value
right into the TypeHandler, based on the target type placed into the buffer
2019-06-23 18:57:21 +02:00
d57770ca89 Commands: disable equivalence-test on command equality
This was prompted by a test failing under Boost-1.65 (--> see #294)
When reviewed now, the whole idea of testing Steam-Layer Commands for
equivalence feels a bit sketchy.

Just the comparison for the command ''identity'' alone seems sufficient,
i.e. the test if a command-ID is associated with the same backend-handle
and thus the same functor binding.
2019-06-23 17:35:21 +02:00
06163f6016 Timeline: filter to select the pinned prefix part of the profile
...when rendering this part, which shall be always visible.
And the rest of the profile needs to be rendered into a second canvas,
which is placed within a pane with scrollbar.

Implemented as a statefull iterator filter
2019-06-21 23:18:44 +02:00
ac3f1d8bef Timeline: implement access mechanism through getter lambda
works, but not really convinced yet...
2019-06-21 20:00:44 +02:00
6b6ed5e0eb Timeline: need accessor function for profile
TODO / WIP.
We can no longer just grab the profile by reference;
rather we need a sensible way how to activate the recomputation logic
2019-06-20 19:01:15 +02:00
77805a5c8c Timeline: handle notification of structural updates 2019-06-20 18:53:12 +02:00
83c462abc3 Timeline: investigate how to handle profile rebuilding
as it turns out, the core problem is that we need a way to detect and signal
structural changes to the logical UI model
2019-06-20 15:36:09 +02:00
d5af020520 Timeline: possible solution for construction of the TrackProfile
...not yet really convinced though
...how does this relate to the "display evaluation pass" of the Layout Manager?
2019-06-15 21:45:38 +02:00
c87ca5d632 Timeline: generalise unsafe access to embedded profile data
While somewhat ugly, I deem this acceptable in such a context,
where the implementation handles its own embedded storage structure.
2019-06-15 17:41:17 +02:00
a105e02b52 Timeline: wire distinct grounding/overlay renderers
TODO:
 - actual draw operations not yet implemented
 - find a way how to select the prelude / body part of the track profile

This is a consequence of subsuming the timeline ruler under the concept of an overview track
2019-06-13 18:17:46 +02:00
3f04bb8698 Timeline: sort out how to link the ProfileInterpreter into the draw function 2019-06-13 17:54:06 +02:00
223113ee44 Timeline: switch TrackProfile to hold a sequence of VerbPack entries
turns out to be mostly a drop-in replacement.
2019-06-12 03:29:00 +02:00
1a8917e60a Timeline: after a long break... reconsider how to integrate the new VerbPack
...into the draft skeleton of timeline drawing
2019-06-11 02:40:20 +02:00
f6e5886348 Library: complete test coverage of VerbPack 2019-06-11 02:40:20 +02:00
3d5a67ed14 Library: finish and clean-up the solution for VerbPack dispatch 2019-06-10 16:08:50 +02:00
8f43c2591e Library: investigate malfunction in metaprogramming
the template lib::PolymorphicValue seemingly picked the wrong
implementation strategy for "virtual copy support": In fact it is possible
to use the optimal strategy here, since our interface inherits from CloneSupport,
yet the metaprogramming logic picked the mix-in-adapter (which requires one additional "slot"
of storage plus a dynamic_cast at runtime).

The reason for this malfunction was the fact that we used META_DETECT_FUNCTION
to detect the presence of a clone-support-function. This is not correct, since
it can only detect a function in the *same* class, not an inherited function.

Thus, switching to META_DETECT_FUNCTION_NAME solves this problem
Well, this solution has some downsides, but since I intend to rewrite the
whole virtual copy support (#1197) anyway, I'll deem this acceptable for now


TODO / WIP: still some diagnostics code to clean up, plus a better solution for the EmptyBase
2019-05-10 02:19:01 +02:00
23c9da7c62 Library: solve the dilemma by inheriting from VerbToken
...which, in the end, can even be considered the more logical design choice,
since the "verb visitor" is a more elaborated and sophisiticated Verb-Token,
adding the special twist of embedded storage for variable function arguments
2019-05-09 23:40:47 +02:00
a57799d018 Library: further narrowing down the tuple-forwarding problem
...yet still not successful.

The mechanism used for std::apply(tuple&) works fine when applied directly to the target function,
but fails to select the proper overload when passed to a std::forward-call for
"perfect forwarding". I tried again to re-build the situation of std::forward
with an explicitly coded function, but failed in the end to supply a type parameter
to std::forward suitably for all possible cases
2019-05-09 17:10:35 +02:00
612a442550 Library: unable to reproduce the problem with an "equivalent" demo example
...the simplified demo variant in try.cpp is accepted by the compiler and works as intended,
while the seemingly equivalent construction in verb-visitor.hpp is rejected by the compiler

This discrepancy might lead to a solution....?
2019-04-22 17:45:38 +02:00
a530665769 Library: fix some reference passing errors
...but bad news on the main issue:
the workaround consumes the tuple and thus is not tenable!

And what is even worse: the textbook implementation of std::apply is
equivalent to our workaround and also consumes the argument tuple
2019-04-22 16:54:22 +02:00
e28635a11a Library: investigate copy behaviour in forwarding calls 2019-04-21 03:52:34 +02:00
ec9b2388da Timeline: consider how to integrate the drawing code
...which leads to a specific twist here; while in the simple version
we still could hope to get away with a simple uniform uint argument,
the situation has changed altogether now. The canvas has turned into
some generic component, since it is instantiated two times, onece for
the time ruler and once for the actual body content. Thus all of the
specifics of the drawing code need to be pushed into a new, dedicated
renderer component. And this more or less forces us to pass all the
actual presentation variations through the invocation arguments of
the visitor.

So we're now off again for a digression, we need a more generalised visitor
2019-04-14 15:38:57 +02:00
7ee0baa241 Timeline: reorganise widget structure within body pane to accommodate time ruler
After thinking the whole concept over several times, it occurred to me that
a separate implementation of a time ruler would be quite redundant with the
envisioned feature of per-track overview rulers. Following this line of thought,
the time ruler would just be some specifically configured overview ruler.

This has the somewhat unfortunate consequence, that it becomes the responsibility
of the body canvas to render the overview ruler, thereby somehow delegating
to a common renderer implementation. Which makes the whole setup of the body canvas
way more complex, because now we get *two* canvas like painting areas, one
always visible at top, and the second one, the content area, fully scrollable
within the lower part.
2019-04-13 17:55:28 +02:00
bd13df2308 Timeline: establish wiring with the timeline DisplayManager 2019-04-12 02:00:19 +02:00
9292da84f2 Timeline: generate the symbolic track profile description
...by recursive walk over the track structure
2019-04-11 17:31:09 +02:00
e85f218045 Timeline: define representation of the profile verb tokens 2019-04-06 19:34:31 +02:00
df02258547 Timeline: use a sequence of structure description verbs
...like
 * ruler
 * gap
 * content
 * open/close sub scope
...
2019-04-06 18:21:26 +02:00
f2eea38c07 Timeline: plan for the drawing routine 2019-04-06 04:20:31 +02:00
ab02e47501 DOC: a drawing to explain the 3D structure of the Track controls in the UI
Even while EveryoneElese indulges in cool "flat" UI graphics,
we still think that a plausible 3D structure of UI widgets supports intuitive user interaction


As an asside, this commit fixes a mistake with the licenses of several of these documentation drawings.
I am the author of all these SVGs and thus can fix such a license glitch without much ado.
These drawing shall be licensed in accordance to the general rule for Lumiera Documentation,
which is to use a Libre-style license, here CC-by-sa (which does *not* limit commercial use)
2019-04-05 23:46:38 +02:00
1cf2e459c6 Timeline: consider to turn RulerTrack into a part of the systematic UI model
...meaing
 - it can be diff mutated
 - it is attached to the UI-Bus
 - it has persistent presentation state
2018-12-15 06:05:18 +01:00
1452f1f022 Timeline: plan how to organise time ruler and overview ruler
...the idea is to subsume them within a generic ruler concept
2018-12-15 03:32:57 +01:00
ad9043ae1d Timeline: add the typical framework for custom drawing on the canvas
see gtk-canvas-experiment.cpp
2018-12-10 00:12:53 +01:00
615796d812 Timeline: set an initial size for the canvas 2018-12-10 00:12:53 +01:00
116600b20a Timeline: draft a concept to attack the custom layout
the core question is: how to translate time into pixel coordinates
2018-12-10 00:12:52 +01:00
2ea89fcb54 Dispatcher: rework loop control logic
- we got occasional hangups when waiting for disabled state
- the builder was not triggered properly, sometimes redundant, sometimes without timeout

As it turned out, the loop control logic is more like a state machine,
and the state variables need to be separated from the external influenced variables.

As a consequence, the inChange_ variable was not calculated properly when disabled in a race,
and then the loop went into infinite wait state, without propagating this to
the externally waiting client, which caused the deadlock
2018-12-10 00:12:52 +01:00
a49d79ffbd Library: fix spurious wake-up from (non)timed wait
A classical carry-over of dirty values...
Problem arises, when starting an unconditional wait on the same object monitor,
which previously conducted a timed wait. Then the obsolete timeout from the previous
wait remained in place, causing our Sync-Wrapper (erroneously) to assume a timed wait
and then pthread to return immediately from this timed wait.

The result was permanent idle looping in the ProcDispatcher, after the first command was processed
2018-12-10 00:09:56 +01:00
8d6cb19e3f Global-Layer-Renaming: fix handling of GuiResources in the build
the new structure causes them now to be installed into $TARGET/stage
which is simply not what I want. I still consider $TARGET/gui the better choice,
since an administrator or packager is not aware of our layer namings.

The existing solution was half baked anyway, it did not really replicate the source tree.
On the other hand, I want to retain the location of the CSS files within the GUI tree,
since I consider it a good practice, to keep "code-like" resources with the actual code,
and not far away in some arcane "data" directory.

No I've noticed, that the env.GuiResource() function is only used once, for this very task.
So, for the time being, we can keep it simple and deditaced to that task, i.e
we pick up all CSS files we find and install it into a single target directory.

NOTE: this issue has brought to my attention two further, completely unrelated issues

 * Ticket #1192 (Lumiera hangs on failed GUI start)
 * The ProcDispatcher does an idle wait, due to an error in timed-wait implementation
2018-11-16 18:18:33 +01:00
cc2ff520ed DOC: Plan to rename the three Layers
Considering this since some time, since it more and more occurred to me
the existing conventional names are a misfit. And they are dull and clumsy.

This fall, I mentioned it to Benny, and he seemed to be rather favourable towards that idea,
which encourages me just to go ahead. Unfortunately, I am alone on the coding frontier
right now, which has several downsides, but at least it gives me the ability
to pull off radical moves.
2018-11-15 16:06:55 +01:00
866d7efe0a Timeline: push the trackname attribute down into the widget/display
...in accordance to our general design guideline: we don't duplicate
actual model values within the controllers/presenters, since our widgets
act themselves as view-model
2018-11-10 03:02:24 +01:00
c8dc5a24a8 DummySessionConnection: extend population diff to send distinct root-track
This change demonstrates how to deal properly with possible duplicate entities
with similar symbolic ID: define a RandomID (to guarantee a distinct hash on each instance).
In the actual implementation, this should happen already within the domain model,
not when constructing the diff (obviously of course...)

This change also adds a mutation sequence to inject the actual track name
2018-11-10 02:39:17 +01:00
a4c37ed99c Library: allow for an explicitly random EntryID
same pattern as the existing EntryID, i.e. a human readable symbol plus a hash
but the hash is just random, instead of deriving it from the symbol text.

Use case is when we explicitly need a distinct identity, even when the
human readable symbolic name is the same. Actual example: the fork root in the timeline
2018-11-10 01:01:59 +01:00
7cc68fadea GenNode / Timeline: allow to mutate attribute objects with explicitly given ID
so this seems to be the better approach for dealing with this insidious problem.
In some cases -- as here most prominently with the root track within the timeline --
we have to care within the domain model to prepare unique ids even for sub objects
treated as attributes. In the actual case, without that special attention,
all timelines would hold onto an attribute "fork" with the same ID, based
on the type of the nested object plus the string "fork". Thus all root track
representations in the GUI would end up listening to the same ID on the UI-Bus...
2018-11-09 22:55:08 +01:00
1bbe903202 GenNode: revert -- better not handle this problem on ETD level
...rather extend the "object builder" DSL notation to allow passing in a given EntryID literally.
Rationale is, we should handle the problem of unique IDs on the level of the domain model.
If we attempt to "fix" this within GenNode, the price would be to make the ETD creation stateful
2018-11-09 22:50:48 +01:00
83394a6f01 GenNode: investigate Problem with non-unique attribute IDs
this is not a problem, strictly sepaking, locally.
But it becomes a problem once the GUI uses those attribute IDs
as Element-IDs for tangible UI entities, which need to be uniquely
addressable via the UI-Bus.

An obvious solution is to inject randomness into the Attribute ID hash
2018-11-09 20:19:45 +01:00
20451c958a Timeline: add preliminary track-head display
just some labels, so that we can see the added content
TODO: unsolved problem: how to pass the track name
2018-11-06 01:01:00 +01:00
13286f4b90 ElementBox: define the desired properties of this fundamental building block (#1185) 2018-11-01 20:37:36 +01:00
04b665afd1 Timeline: concept for the TrackBody helpers
these recursively nested helper entities work together with the TimelineCanvas
and enable the latter to draw the track background in the Timeline Widget and
to find out about the vertical coordinates where to place content (Clip, Effects, Markers)
2018-10-31 03:52:24 +01:00
0aa4a8cb42 Timeline: make the Patchbay a Viewport container, to follow body scrolling
Gtk::Viewport allows to add the ability to scroll a partial view window
for a container larger than the available display area. The position
and movement of this window is controlled by Gtk::Adjustments,
which can be located elsewhere.

Here we use the existing Adjustments of the ScrolledWindow
holding the body canvas; this setup makes the header pane follow
the scroll movements of the body
2018-10-30 03:37:55 +01:00
8803af1a0a Timeline: further steps towards attaching the widget structure 2018-10-28 18:56:04 +01:00
3dd3fc7810 Timeline: decide upon the organisation of the header pane
we'll uses a recursive structure here, based on nested grids
2018-10-28 01:56:24 +02:00
c212ce94ca Timeline: setup basic widget structure 2018-10-28 01:30:02 +02:00
2d4e58db02 Timeline: consider how to manage size and layout of timeline contents
bottom line is to do most autmatically, and to establish a slave-relation
navigation-area -> timeline-ruler
header-pane-content -> corresponding track-body

this can be accomplished mostly by connecting the aproprieate signals,
thus these widgets will live within the Layout-Manager, which consequently
is renamed into TimelineLayout
2018-10-27 17:27:29 +02:00
c3d91d4ed3 Timeline: draft for building the nested recursive display structure
the solution idea is to use a helper frame, and an "anchor functor",
which is passed down from the respective parent context, and which
does the actual work of injecting the child widgets at the apropriate
position within the parent display.
2018-10-27 01:52:46 +02:00
572bd38fec DummySessionConnection: produce a simple population diff message
seems to work surprisingly well...
the diff application poceeds in the GUI up to the point
where the TrackPresenter need to be inserted into a two-fold display context
2018-10-15 02:54:42 +02:00
de5f0b85d4 DummySessionConnection: new tab in the TestControl dialog box
...to trigger the new fake-functionality
2018-10-14 23:59:35 +02:00
77902d54a6 DummySessionConnection: prepare schaffolding for fake-commands (see #1042)
To drive the timeline display in the UI ahead, the plan is to have
a faked action, which injects dummy population diff messages into the GUI,
resulting in the build-up of a typical simple session timeline
2018-10-14 17:24:13 +02:00
67cccbdc5d Timeline: actually accept and install the TimelineWidget
As starting point, provide an empty placeholder widget to fill the void
2018-10-14 03:48:39 +02:00
6e18452c37 Timeline: arrange for a tabbed notebook to hold the timeline widgets
...and remove all the leftover test and research code from 2016
which was archived to /research some days ago
in 3f87ef43ec
2018-10-13 21:56:36 +02:00
202b1e4dbd Timeline: implement handling of INS verb to create new Timeline
decision: for now we will represent *every* Timeline present in the Session.
Later it would also possible to skip some representation; however we'd need
a way to store such presentation state such that we'd be able to get at this
persisted stat right at this point here, when processing the Diff.
2018-10-13 03:47:31 +02:00
bfca473dce Timeline: decide upon the diff format expected for creating a timeline
other than the regular way of building an object,
we do expect a minimal structure to be sent right within the INS message.

Rationale: the standard way would allow for too much leeway and created
unwanted intermediary states. The non-standard way decided upon here
is well within the limits of our diff language
2018-10-13 02:46:09 +02:00
e81b0592d3 TreeMutator: combine no-op layer with selective other diff binding
...and complete unit test coverage.
This is complex stuff and we'd better be careful it actually works
2018-10-12 02:05:11 +02:00
0d5f29446b TreeMutator: provide no-op implementation
how to further your career with eight simple steps
2018-10-12 01:07:13 +02:00
fb93e349da TreeMutator: conjure up a black hole mutator
...which is a somewhat involved version of /dev/null
2018-10-11 23:56:33 +02:00
82321a7594 Timeline: draft solution how to delegate to the actual TimelineWidget
Problem is, the InteractionDirector, being the representation of the model root,
needs to manage and maintain the collection of "timelines". However, these
can not be widgets, rather, they need to attach to widgets living within
the GUI widget structure proper, i.e. within the TimelinePanel

proposed solution is to build a smart handle based on WLink,
but also delegating the DiffMutable interface
2018-10-11 17:21:47 +02:00
b65db50666 Timeline: some considerations regarding timeline slave display (#1083) 2018-10-11 14:29:55 +02:00
2adcabbef5 Timeline: draft the root attachment point where timelines are created by diff
This involves a fundamental decision about how to build structures in the Lumiera UI:
They shall be solely created in response to diff messages. Which leads us to
introduce a new (and quite challenging) concept: the »DiffConstituent«
2018-10-10 05:45:46 +02:00
08ed6e1ee8 Timeline: building the layout and control structure (#1016)
This marks start of actual work on this fundamental task.

Extensive planning from 2016 is available, together with an almost
complete diff binding for the entities involved into timeline display.
2018-10-08 02:27:28 +02:00
76dd4fb5dc ...tidy.up: prepare for working on the timeline display
''a new hope''

This was quite a long way until we're back at the point of
re-building the timeline anew.

Stash the canvas research code to make room for new things to come
2018-10-07 03:44:00 +02:00
cd557f50ec DemoGuiRoundtrip: successfully completed (closes #1999) 2018-10-06 17:42:22 +02:00
e8931bf4bf NotificationDisplay: react on changes of the error state
this turned out to be more tricky than expected.
When we initially configure the UI and invoke this->show_all(),
seemingly some draw-callbacks will be scheduled into the event loop.
Just set_visible(false) on the relevant buttons directly after that call
will have no effect (since the widget is still hidden at that point anyway,
it is not yet mapped and realised).

Thus we need to schedule a callback with the Glib::signal_idle(),
so our state detection runs after the initial mapping of the UI


NOTE: there is a minor itch, which I don't address right now:
when adding the error state and thus revealing the additional buttons,
the error log grabs some additional horizontal space, even while there
would be ample space for the additional buttons within the button bar.
When the error state is cleared and the buttons thus hidden again,
the additional horizontal space is dropped and the error log gets
narrower. Probably we'd need some special GTK call to re-allocate
the required space properly
2018-10-05 18:26:26 +02:00
12344ae9d8 NotificationDisplay: add an Error-State and implement signal to trigger on change
this is more or less gratitious functionality for now,
yet I consider it a proof-of-concept
2018-10-05 15:59:21 +02:00
33af82cf73 NotificationDisplay: now responding to the "Flash" message on UI-Bus
solved by temporarily adding a CSS class.
Mostly this was an issue of writing the Stylesheet properly.

Hint: use the GTK+ inspector, i.e. run with

GTK_DEBUG=interactive target/lumiera
2018-10-05 05:36:53 +02:00
e573d3cc96 StyleCSS: add alternative stylesheet to be comined with the system theme (#1170)
Even while we (still) have the goal to ship our own stylesheet and provide
the typical subdued media-aplication look, right now this porting and styling effort (#1023)
is unfinished and handled with rather low priority (writing code is more important
than toying with styles and looks).

This alternative stylesheet is meant to be used with a typical "light" desktop theme.
We'll add just the bare minimum of definitions to make lumiera work well in that setup.
And right now, I'll use that setup to continue with my development work
2018-10-05 03:25:50 +02:00
fb4d9be2b4 draft generic decorator to make a widget flash
not finished, having problems with Lumiera's stylesheet
2018-10-05 00:16:45 +02:00
5aa28626ad NotificationDisplay: function to demote error entries into warnings
...and remove them from the mark-index for special handling
2018-10-03 19:33:28 +02:00
e9527d6304 NotificationDisplay: proper handling of marks at insert position
Basically we create a pair of marks, with left/right gravity and then
inject the content between. Unfortunately, when the insert position
is the very end of the buffer (which it always is), this trick
leads to nesting the marked regions into each other.

As a remedy, we first insert the trailing newline,
and then attach the insert position one step before
2018-10-03 19:13:39 +02:00
4635d18265 NotificationDisplay: draft function to retain only the errors
discard all other info log messages and retain only the entries marked as error.
This is also a proof-of-concept regarding position bookmarks and markup.

Implemented by populating a new buffer and swapping it into place.
2018-10-03 17:50:20 +02:00
c6b8811af0 Library: utility to interpret a text as bool value (yes/no)
...also fixes the problem with the "expand" mark in DemoGuiRoundtrip
2018-10-03 04:43:16 +02:00
7655960b23 Fix Zombie invocation in GUI shutdown (closes #1178)
== possible Scenario ==
 1. Gui: sigTerm invoked
 2. last Subsystem -> cleans all remaining Subsy entries
 3. main-Thread wakens
 4. leaves main() und undloads the GUI plug-in
 5. which destroys the `DependencyFactory<LocationQuery>` placed in static memory
 6. the Gui-Thread returns from sigTerm()  and invokes `~UiManager()`
 7. which indirectly deregisters through `InteractionDirector` the `LocationQuery` Service
 8. `DependInject::Service::shutdown()` grabs the Lock ==> **BOOM**

== Solution ==
Ensure all dtors of the UI backbone are invoked ''prior'' to calling sigTerm()
2018-10-02 02:45:01 +02:00
4e94dfd4d9 FailureHandling: improved ZombieCheck
now capturing the Zombie's ID

==> surprise, its ClassLock<gui::interact::LocationQuery>
2018-10-01 05:51:21 +02:00
70c8718258 FailureHandling: rectify shortcomings in Proc-Command error handling
and especially our provisional dummy code to execute some commands "right here"
should also check and raise captured exceptions from command invocation
2018-10-01 04:09:45 +02:00
77c9a6a1da FailureHandling: investigate crash in emergency shutdown
As it turns out, several problems reinforce each other
- lumiera error does not properly propagate the cause message
- our test/dummy code does not check the ExecResult
- thus the exception is detected rather accidentally, when entring the next sync/wait state
- emergency shutdown is chaotic in its very nature (this is well known...)
- but especially triggerShutdown is not airtight and might die...
- causing the shutdown to hang....

And last but not least, a ZombieCheck tripwire got triggered,
but unfortunately I was unable to get hold of the zombie iteself
2018-10-01 04:09:45 +02:00
23430f8800 NotificationDisplay: fix improper state mark for "expand" (WIP)
test_meta_markAction always produces a state mark with payload type string.
However, the model::Tangible expects a bool payload when handling the "expand" mark.

- add diagnostics to lib::variant to indicate expected and actual payload type
- attempt to fix with boost::lexical_cast; this is insufficient, since
  you'd expect such a function to understand "true" and "false" etc.

Moreover, raising this exception causes emergency shutdown, which
flounders due to triggering a ZombieCheck. Interesting.
2018-10-01 00:47:19 +02:00
f9c6a49b9b NotificationDisplay: implement reset/clearAll 2018-10-01 00:47:19 +02:00
f97beaa774 GuiNotification: implementation complete (closes #1047)
The very backbone structure of the Lumiera UI, the UI-Bus is now fully defined
and proven to be operative, including asynchronous dispatch of messages
an a generic notification mechanism
2018-10-01 00:46:22 +02:00
5fd3fb3d7b DemoGuiRoundtrip: first successful complete roundtrip GUI->Proc->GUI (see #1099)
A communication chain, triggered from a button in a non-modal dialog box,
passing invocation into another thread, dispatched by the ProcDispatcher,
then again passing thread boundaries to push a response back into the UI.

This is a milestone, and integrates several components built during the last years.
2018-09-29 17:34:25 +02:00
abfb897336 DemoGuiRoundtrip: now invoke the Proc-Layer commands from within the UI dialog 2018-09-29 15:23:47 +02:00
e54556f565 DemoGuiRoundtrip: draft mock commands to be invoked
this would be the first half of the roundtrip, the call UI -> Proc
2018-09-29 13:37:48 +02:00
6b941b2c1e TestControl: retrieve action arguments from the dialog controls
...and this also demonstrates how action code will typically be arranged within such a dialog page
2018-09-29 01:26:35 +02:00
10b9abd79b TestControl: build the necessary control widgets
- a text input field
- a trigger to invoke the showInfo function on GuiNotification
- triggers to send state mark messages via GuiNotification into the UI-Bus
- a combo box to define the action-ID within those state mark messages

With these controls, it should be possible to execute all the variations
of the Tangible element protocol and verify the respective behaviour
has been coded up properly within the receiving ErrorLogDisplay widget

Note the key point (and the next step to code up) is for #1099 to
invoke a dummy/demo command in Proc-Layer, which in turn pushes an
reaction via the GuiNotification facade back into the UI asynchronously...
2018-09-27 04:15:27 +02:00
77980ef024 TestControl: the first tangible UI feedback caused via UI-Bus (see #1099)
wrap up the helpers and wire the connection to the UI-Bus.
Then attempt a direct invocation, still within the GTK thread.

While this might seem as just some silly experiment, in fact it is
*** THE FUCKING FIRST TIME to transmit a visible action to a real widget ***

this links together and integrates various efforts achieved during the last years
2018-09-26 17:17:59 +02:00
74f3ab3932 TestControl: concept draft how to simplify building notebook widgets
Gtk::Notebook is a quite powerful container foundation to build complex dialog widgets with multible pages on tabs.
Hower, the construction, wiring an setup is notoriously tedious, due to the repetitiveness
and the sheer amount of child widgets spread over various pages.

This design draft is an attempt to mitigate the required boilerplate, without
overly much obscuring the structure. The basic idea is to package each page into
a locally defined child struct, which is actually heap allocated and managed automatically.
This way, each child page gets its own namespace, and wiring to other components
is made explicit by passing named ctor arguments -- while the overall structure
of building and wiring of widgets stays close to the habits of Gtkmm programming.
2018-09-26 15:47:39 +02:00
0c082361f3 TestControl: hooked up a simple child-dialog (see #1174)
...which gives us already the base functionality required to run the first tests

- can be triggered from the Help menu
- non-modal dialog (Gtk::Dialog)
- attached as child / slave-Window to the current active workspace window
- window manager hint to keep it on top
- have a notebook control within the dialog
- attached (passively) to the UI-Bus
2018-09-25 06:11:38 +02:00
7f760d77e5 TestControl: prepare a location in the UI for test and diagnostics (#1074) 2018-09-25 05:31:41 +02:00
245a07bc16 NotificationDisplay: integrate for warning and error display
Surprise, surprise.... it really works
our "bang" messages are fantastic, yellow and bold now
2018-09-24 04:17:04 +02:00
fa55ff63d5 NotificationDisplay: investigate ways to define the markup tag(s)
...with the option to expand this approach later to use a central StyleManager (#1169)
2018-09-24 03:30:42 +02:00
5b14e83ebf NotificationDisplay: investigate options to organise error display markup
...just to decide not to follow-up too much on that topic right now.
As it turns out, GTK seems to be lacking in that respect. I have plotted
some ideas how we could work around that discrepancy in future...

And for this simple DemoGuiRoundtrip, we'll just use direct styling,
but we'll store a table of bookmarks for the error entries, allowing
us to add further features later on top
2018-09-23 16:20:24 +02:00
0be0f77c16 NotificationDisplay: wire up simple message display 2018-09-21 14:38:38 +02:00
8fa3eb2517 NotificationDisplay: integrate with the new Revealer-Functor (closes #1162)
after an extended digression to fix our matcher for tests on the EventLog,
the new helper abstractions gui::model::Expander and gui::model::Revealer
are now covered and ready for use.

In this special case here, the controller uses both the Expander and Revealer
inherited from model::Tangible; yet both are wired to access the actual
display widget via the getter, and delegate to the Expander rsp. Revealer
located within the widget. Which in turn are wired when creating the widget
within the InfoboxPanel.

Bottom line -- we have a generic scheme now, and the actual implementation
is filled in as lambda, at the point where the component or widget is created
2018-09-21 05:17:54 +02:00
258a807e97 EventLog: reorder code to accommodate the split
well... reduction in size of the debug build objects
turns out not to be so large as I hoped. But it is significant anyway,
about 3-4MB on the most affected test classes. Plus from now on we
do not repeat that code on other tests using the same features.
2018-09-20 04:11:00 +02:00
1df5bf5c5e EventLog: split into header and dedicated translation unit (WIP) 2018-09-20 02:19:10 +02:00
9e96effcf1 EventLog: prepare for dedicated translation unit
up to now, EventLog was header only, which seems to cause
a significant bloat in terms of generated code size, especially
in debug builds. One major source for this kind of "template bloat"
is the IterChainSearch, rsp. the filter and transformer iterators.

And since EventLog is not meant for performance critical application code,
but rather serves as helper for writing unit tests, an obvious remedy is
to move that problematic part of the code down into a dedicate translation
unit, instead of using inline functions. To prepare this refactoring,
some var arg (templated) API funcitons need to be segregated.
2018-09-20 01:42:31 +02:00
121d78e13b EventLog: now able to write the condition to verify doRevealYourself (#1162)
this initially (on 1.9.18) triggered this extended digression;
The initial naive implementation (without backtracking) did not allow
to express such a simple thing like "function XXX" not invoked (again) after "function XXX"
2018-09-19 03:27:48 +02:00
03a1d58198 EventLog: verify and complete the TestEventLog_test
can now cover all the cases as initially intended,
including backtracking
2018-09-19 02:52:38 +02:00
3994f805b0 EventLog: further bugfix to get the augmented sequencing logic correct.
For the before / after chaining search functions,
we now do one single step in the respective direction before evaluating
the new (next) filter condition. However, we also need to *deactivate* the
previous condition, otherwise that single "step" might cause us to jump
or even exhaust the underlying filter, due to the old filter condition
still being applied.
2018-09-19 01:24:26 +02:00
991b8ace82 EventLog: rectify the quirky logic for before / after chains
due to the lack of real backtracking, the existing solution
relied on a quirk, and started the before / after chained search
conditions /at/ the current element, not after / before it.

Now we're able to remove this somewhat surprising behaviour, yet to do so
we also need to introduce basic "just search" variations of all search
operations, in order to define the initial condition for a chained search.
Without that, the first condition in a chain would never be able to
match on the header entry of the log
2018-09-19 00:21:09 +02:00
0c7996fe90 EventLog: drop-in the new IterChainSerach engine
- need to use dedicated steps in the chain for every added condition now

- seems to break the logic on tests on non-match.
  This doesn't come as a surprise, since backtracking can be expected
  to reveal additional solutions.

NOTE: some tests broken, to be investigated

est-event-log-test.cpp:228: thread_1: verify_callLogging: (log.ensureNot("fun").after("fun").after("fun2"))
2018-09-16 03:02:22 +02:00
1683439b32 ChainSearch: backtracking verified -- finished 2018-09-16 01:08:49 +02:00
84399aa407 ChainSearch: verify proper interplay of two dynamic search conditions 2018-09-16 01:08:49 +02:00
84c30fe802 ChainSearch: need to gear up immediately after backtracking
...which can be achieved by checking the backtracking loop
always right after the non-backtracking iteration, exploiting
the fact that the guard conditions of both are complimentary.
So the only case when we'd actually enter the backtracking
loop after regular iteration would precisely be when
we drop down due to exahausting an upper layer.

The result now reads

"sausage-bacon-tomato-and-spam-spam-bacon-spam-tomato-and-spam-bacon-tomato-and-bacon-tomato-and-tomato-and"

...which sounds correct, yay!
2018-09-16 01:08:48 +02:00
646a2e42cf ChainSearch: need to overload also the iterator function
...since usually such evaluation layers are finally wrapped into
an IterableDecorator and then presented as TreeEplorer -- an exercise
we do not want to perform here, since it is pointless in the typicall
use case. The IterChainSearch is already meant to be ready-for-use.

Thus, instead of wrapping again, the pragmatic solution is simply
to overload the missing operator++ and make it call the augmented
iterNext() function. Related to this, we also need to ensure
proper operation in case no further expansion is mandated
2018-09-16 01:08:48 +02:00
38a1aad897 ChainSearch: bugfixes on reworked construction
...seems basically sane now.
Just we still need to wrap it one more time into IterableDecorator;
which means the overall scheme how to build and package the whole pipeline
is not correct yet.

Maybe it is not possible to get it packaged all into one single class?
2018-09-16 01:08:48 +02:00
05e6e7f316 ChainSearch: remould construction to get the logic correct
on closer investigation it turned out that the logic of the
first design attempt was broken altogether. It did not properly
support backtracking (which was the reason to start this whole
exercise) and it caused dangling references within the lambda
closure once the produced iterator pipeline was moved out
into the target location.

Reasoning from first principles then indicated that the only sane
way to build such a search evaluation component is to use *two*
closely collaborating layers. The actual filter configuration
and evaluation logic can not reside and work from within the
expander. Rather, it must sit in a layer on top and work in
a conventional, imperative way (with a while loop).

Sometimes, functional programming is *not* the natural way
of doing things, and we should then stop attempting to force
matters against their nature.
2018-09-16 01:08:45 +02:00
767156e912 TreeExplorer: unit test coverage for injected custom layer 2018-09-16 01:07:23 +02:00
09d923db06 TreeExplorer: add the ability to inject a custom defined layer
this is an rather obvious extension to the TreeExplorer framework.
In some cases, client code wants to define its own very specific
processing layers, beyond of what can be done with filters and
transformers. Obviously, writing such a custom layer requires
intimate knowledge about the internals of TreeExplorer

the actual use case prompting this extension is IterChainSearch;
it turned out that the original design can not be implemented,
unless the resulting object is non-copyable (which violates
the basic traits of a TreeExplorer based pipeline).
2018-09-15 03:09:48 +02:00
8aae789b82 ChainSearch: test case to scrutinise chained filter reconfiguration
...and TADAA ... there we get an insidious bug:

we capture *this by reference into the expansion functor,
and then we move *this away, out from the builder into the target....
2018-09-14 21:06:15 +02:00
29d2c151b3 ChainSearch: add builder function just to replace the filter
Up to now, we had a very simplistic configuration option just
to search for a match, and we had the complete full-blown reconfiguration
builder option, which accepts a functor to work on and reconfigure the
embedded Filter chain.

It occurred to me that in many cases you'd rather want some intermediary
level of flexibility: you want to replace the filter predicate entirely
by some explicitly given functor, yet you don't need the full ability
to re-shape the Filter chain as a whole. In fact the intended use case
for IterChainSearch (which is the EventLog I am about to augment with
backtracking capabilities) will only ever need that intermediate level.


Thus wer're adding this intermediary level of configurability now.

The only twist is that doing so requires us to pass an "arbitrary function like thing"
(captured by universal reference) through a "layer of lambdas". Which means,
we have to capture an "arbitrary thingie" by value.

Fortunately, as I just found out today, C++14 allows something which comes
close to that requirement: the value capture of a lambda is allowe to have
an intialiser. Which means, we can std::forward into the value captured
by the intermediary lambda. I just hope I never need to know or understand
the actual type this captured "value" takes on.... :-)
2018-09-14 21:06:15 +02:00
10f21f77f8 ChainSearch: resolve the problems and get basic functionality to work
with the augmented TreeExplorer, we're now able to get rid of the
spurious base layer, and we're able to discard the filter and
continue with the unfiltered sequence starting from current position.
2018-09-14 21:06:15 +02:00
df7a9492b7 TreeExplorer: helper function so support ChainSearch::clearFilter()
build a special feature into the Explorer component of TreeExplorer,
causing it to "lock into" the current child sequence and discard
all previous sequences from the stack of child explorations
2018-09-14 21:06:15 +02:00
5b92f5cf74 ChainSearch: fix broken logic when configuring base layer
There is an asymetry, insofar the base layer configuration is
evaluated immediately, causing the MutableFilter to be reconfigured
and forwarded to the first match.

to the contrary, when configuring an additional layer, we just
add it to the chain, but then need to iterate once to cause
this configuration actually to be unfolded onto the stack
2018-09-14 21:06:15 +02:00
2ca3e95e9e ChainSearch: allow for overconstrained search
...which just turns the pipeline into exhausted state,
instead of raising an Assertion failure

The point is, expandChildren() does not guard itself,
since it _requires_ an non-empty iterator as precondition.
Thus, any function downstream, which invokes expandChildren(),
has to check and guard this call apropriately.

In the concrete case at hand we just stop adding further constraints
when the pipeline is already in exhausted state
2018-09-14 21:06:15 +02:00
0eec4d3b5f ChainSearch: now use the improved TreeExplorer capabilities to address the shortcoming
...the solution built thus far was logically broken, since it retained the unfiltered
source sequence within the base layer. Thus it would backtrack into this unfiltered
sequence eventually.

The idea was to build a special treatment for attaching the first filter condition;
in fact the first one does not need to be added to the chain, but rather should be
planted directly into the base layer.

WIP: this is a solution draft, but does not work yet
  - when attaching the base layer, the filter is pulled twice
  - an overconstrained filter raises an Assertion failure
    (instead of just transitioning into exhausted state)
2018-09-14 21:06:15 +02:00
7cdd680e78 TreeExplorer: clean-up after refactoring
So we have now a reworked version of the internals of TreeExplorer in place.
It should be easier to debug template instantation traces now, since most
of the redundancy on the type parameters could be remove. Moreover, existing
pipelines can now be re-assigned with similarily built pipelines in many cases,
since the concrete type of the functor is now erased.

The price tag for this refactoring is that we have now to perform a call
through a function pointer on each functor invocation (due to the type erasure).
And seemingly the bloat in the debugging information has been increased slightly
(this overhead is removed by stripping the binary)
2018-09-14 21:06:15 +02:00
9067740456 TreeExplorer: refactor Expander to fit in with the reworked design
Here the design trardeoff becomes clearly visiblie
- on the plus side, we removed that spurous redundant info
  from the template parameter, and we simplified functor rebinding
- but as a tradeoff, we now always have two std::function objects
  nested into each other, which also means that at least the outer
  object resides on the heap and /inevitably/ calls through a
  function pointer, even in case the target function is a lambda,
  simply because some type erasure happened, and the call site
  does not know the actual type anymore
2018-09-14 21:06:15 +02:00
36d79be8b2 TreeExplorer: refactor Filter in a similar way 2018-09-14 21:06:15 +02:00
1e657acbff TreeExplorer: refactor Transformer to employ the improved wrapping style
...step by step switch over to the new usage pattern.
Transformer should be the blueprint for all other functor usages.


The reworked solutions behaves as expected;
we see two functor invocations; the outer functor, which does
the argument adaptation, is allocated in heap memory
2018-09-14 21:06:15 +02:00
a91025bfe0 TreeExplorer: perpare a builder for a suitably adapted, wrapped functor.
This does not touch the existing code-path,
but the idea is to use the _FunTraits directly from within the
constructor of the respective processing layer, and to confine the
knowledge of the actual FUN functor type to within that limited context.
Only the generic signature of the resulting std::function need to be
encoded into the type of the processing component, which should help
to simplify the type signatures
2018-09-14 21:06:15 +02:00
5d4f1015aa TreeExplorer: consider refactoring of the functor adaptatiion mechanism
...and in preparation start with some renamings...


The overall goal is to simplify the type signatures and thereby
to make the generates pipelines more assignment compatible.

The debugging experience form the last days indicated that the
current design is not maintainable on the long run. Both the
template instantiation chains and the call stacks are way to
complicated and hard to understand and diagnose
2018-09-14 21:06:15 +02:00
e3ca8548a4 TreeExplorer: allow for a disabled filter
...considered as one of the building blocks to resolve Problems in the Design of ChainSearch
2018-09-14 21:06:15 +02:00
34b78fc47e ChainSearch: identify some possible problems
- as implemented now, we will finally backtrack into the unfiltered base iterator
- it is not possible to implement a clearFilter() operation
2018-09-14 21:06:15 +02:00
c0b8b63df0 ChainSearch: ensure to pass current state without spurious copy
It is essential that we pass the current state of the filter
into the expand functor, where it needs to be copied (once!)
to create a child state, which can then be augmented.

This augmented state is then pushed onto a stack, to enable backtracking.


Due to the flexible adapters and the wrapping into the TreeExplorer builder,
we ended up performing several spurious copies on the current state
2018-09-14 21:06:14 +02:00
d923138d1c ChainSearch: configure the core of the chained search mechanism
...based on a monadic tree expansion: we define a single step,
which takes the current filter configuration and builds the next
filter configuration, based on a stored chain of configuration functions

The actual exhausting depth-first results just by the greedy application pattern,
and uses the stack embedded in the "Explorer" layer of TreeExplorer
2018-09-14 21:06:14 +02:00
2b72175e04 ChainSearch: Storage for the filter chain 2018-09-14 21:06:14 +02:00
d398177a71 ChainSearch: now actually build the processing pipeline in the ctor
..this resolves the most challenging part of the construction work;
we use the static helper functions to infer a type and construct a suitable
processing pipeline and we invoke the same helper to initialise the base class
in the ctor.

Incidentally... we can now drop all the placeholder stubs,
since we now inherit the full iterator and child explorer API.
The test now starts actually to work... we get spam and sausage!

TODO: now actually fill in the expand functor such as to pick the
concrete filter step in the chain from a sequence of preconfigured
filter bindings
2018-09-14 21:06:14 +02:00
a52ed91de0 ChainSearch: draft a solution how to construct the Expand functor type
...now matters start to get really nasty,
since we have to pick up an infered type from a partially built pipeline
and use it to construct the signature for a functor to bind into the more elaborate complete pipeline
2018-09-14 21:06:14 +02:00
6834c26470 ChainSearch: draft a solution how to construct the pipeline builder base type
this is a tricky undertaking, since our treeExplore() helper constructs
a complex wrapped type, depending on the actual builder expressions used.

Solution is to use decltype on the result of a helper function,
and let the _DecoratorTraits from TreeExplorer do the necessary type adaptations
2018-09-14 21:06:14 +02:00
ec8d0557e8 ChainSearch: draft interface and possible implementation approach
The intention is to augment the iterator based (linear) search
used in EventLog to allow for real backtracking, based on a evaluation tree.
This should be rather staight forward to implement, relying on the
exploreChildren() functionality of TreeExplorer. The trick is to package
the chained search step as a monadic flatMap operation
2018-09-14 21:06:14 +02:00
9d7ce1e6a4 EventLog: now able to use the CursorGear immediately as state core
...since TreeExplorer automatically does the iterator wrapping for us.
As added benefit, we have now a direct API to control the search direction
2018-09-14 21:06:14 +02:00
75e1eab4bb EventLog: drop-in the new TreeExplorer::mutableFilter
while this is basically a drop-in replacement,
it marks the switch to the monadic evaluation technology,
which is prerequisite for building real backtracking into the search.
2018-09-14 21:06:14 +02:00
b3f328f28d EventLog: consolidate existing calls to configure the search
create a narrow configuration API for the underlying search mechanism.
Simplifies the task of turning that search into a real backtracking evaluation.
2018-09-14 21:06:14 +02:00
604ffbf73c TreeExplorer: fix a bug and finish the feature
we did an unnecessary copy of the argument, which was uncovered
by the test case manipulating the state core.


Whew.
Now we have a beautiful new overengineered solution
2018-09-14 21:06:14 +02:00
be7f47d5b7 TreeExplorer: rework the solution to allow for arbitrary functor types
outift the Filter base class with the most generic form of the Functor
wrapper, and rather wrap each functor argument individually. This allows
then to combine various kinds of functors
2018-09-14 21:06:14 +02:00
90c0f43cfd TreeExplorer: code all the combination cases
...this solution works, but has a shortcoming:
the type of the passed lambdas is effectively pinned to conform
with the signature of the first lambda used initially when building the filter.

Well, this is the standard use case, but it kind of turns all the
tricky warpping and re-binding into a nonsense excercise; in this form
the filter can only be used in the monadic case (value -> bool).

Especially this rules out all the advanced usages, where the filter
collaborates with the internals of the source.
2018-09-14 21:06:14 +02:00
e29d9ae19e TreeExplorer: better package this very specific code as subclass
while this is basically just code code cosmetics,
at least it marks this as a very distinct special case,
and keeps the API for the standard Filter layer clean.
2018-09-14 21:06:14 +02:00
8f70b4e902 TreeExplorer: prototype for the extracted boilerplate helper
a quite convoluted construct built from several nested generic lambdas.
When investigated in the debugger, the observed addresses and the
invoked code looks sane and as expected.
2018-09-14 21:06:14 +02:00
b4edf8e33c TreeExplorer: find a way to extract the boilerplate
...based on generic lambdas, which are effectively template classes themselves
2018-09-14 21:06:14 +02:00
94da0f627f TreeExplorer: draft ability to remould the filter
The intention is to switch from the itertools-based filter
to the filter available in the TreeExplorer framework.
Thus "basically" we just need to copy the solution over,
since both are conceptually equivalent.

However...... :-(
The TreeExplorer framework is designed to be way more generic
and accepts basically everything as argument and tries to adapt apropriately.

This means we have to use a lot of intricate boilerplate code,
just to get the same effect that was possible in Itertools with
a simple and elegant in-place lambda assignment
2018-09-14 21:06:14 +02:00
757258fb3a TreeExplorer: fix bug in Filter layer
Fillter needs to be re-evaluated, when an downstream entity requests
expandChildren() onto an upstream source. And obviously the ordering
of the chained calls was wrong here.

As it turns out, I had discovered that necessity to re-evaluate with
the Transformer layer. There is a dedicated test case for that, but
I cut short on verifying the filter in that situation as well, so
that piece of broken copy-n-paste code went through undetected.

This is in fact a rather esoteric corner case, because it is only
triggered when the expandChildren() call is passed through the filter.
When otoh the filter sits /after/ the entity generating the expandChildren()
calls, everything works as intended. And the latter is the typical standard
usage situation of an recursive evalutation algorithm: the filter is here
used as final part to drive the evaluation ahead and pick the solutions.
2018-09-14 21:06:14 +02:00
3fc5a94b87 TreeExplorer: investigate the backtracking abilities
There is a bug or shortcoming in the existing ErrorLog matcher implementation.
It is not really difficult to fix, however doing so would require us to intersperse
yet another helper facility into the log matcher. And it occurred to me, that
this helper would effectively re-implement the stack based backtracking ability,
which is already present in TreeExplorer (and was created precisely to support
this kind of recursive evaluation strategies).

Thus I intend to switch the implementation of the EventLog matcher from the
old IterTool framework to the newer TreeExplorer framework. And this intention
made me re-read the code, fixing several comments and re-thinking the design
2018-09-14 21:06:14 +02:00
2520ee82d1 EventLog: investigate failed match in EventLog
seemingly my quick-n-dirty implementation was to naiive.
We need real backtracking, if we want to support switches
in the search direction (match("y").after("x").before("z")

Up to now, I have cheated myself around this obvious problem :-/
2018-09-14 21:06:13 +02:00
026049a13c UiElement: likewise integrate the Revealer functor (#1162) 2018-09-14 21:06:13 +02:00
41e0496576 NotificationDisplay: now able to build the expand functionality
...by delegating to an Expander placed into the ErrorLogDisplay widget
2018-09-14 21:06:13 +02:00
3f327b335a UiElement: switch MockElement to rely on the new functor based default impl
...which is implicit verified through AbstractTangible_test::markState()
2018-09-14 21:06:13 +02:00
51a7670425 UiElement: integrate a default implementation based on the Expander functor 2018-09-14 21:06:13 +02:00
04424fb8df UiElement: code and document the functor components 2018-09-14 21:06:13 +02:00
551920e952 UiElement: decide upon the design variant to use for expand() / reveal() (#1162) 2018-09-14 21:06:13 +02:00
17bcdd952a UiElement: design of helper abstractions (#1162)
to strive at a generic implementation for
- expanding/collapsing a widget
- revealing a widget

which obviously somehow involes storing a closure
2018-09-14 21:06:13 +02:00
837c6d11ff NotificationDisplay: solve the problem with space allocation
as it turns out, we need to set the property_expand() on the child widget
within Gtk::Expander explicitly, to cause the child to grab and additional
available screen space (which obviously is what we want in case of a
log display with scrollbars)
2018-09-14 21:06:13 +02:00
bc3eb7f8da NotificationDisplay: experiment to build a collapsed display
basically Gtk::Expander will do the trick.
However, resizing of the enclosing panel is not handled properly,
the log does not expand to take up the available space, as it did
automaticall when just added directly into the frame
2018-09-14 21:06:13 +02:00
a0b80d8a46 NotificationDisplay: preliminary plans regarding information display in the UI
...while traveling with the train over the Schwäbische Alb to Karlsruhe;
on my way to FrOSCon 2018
2018-09-14 21:06:13 +02:00
65bbc45e02 NotificationDisplay: care for lifecycle issues and expansion state persistence 2018-09-14 21:06:13 +02:00
7846460530 NotificationDisplay: code up controller protocol in NotificationHub
...mostly by delegating to (stubbed) functions in ErrorLogDisplay
2018-09-14 21:06:13 +02:00
a151f28d86 NotificationDisplay: solved that nasty topic of dock access for now
phew...
2018-09-14 21:06:13 +02:00
67ac8601d8 DockAccess: implement preliminary simplistic lookup and allocation 2018-09-14 21:06:13 +02:00
76e79c02ee NotificationDisplay: view allocation can be pushed into the access functor
no need to define a private function on Wizard anymore, it just forwards the call
to the service actually implementing the view allocation. For now this is the
PanelLocator (and eventually this will be the ViewLocator / ViewSpecDSL)
2018-09-14 21:06:13 +02:00
855944eff3 NotificationDisplay: turn the error log into an optional display 2018-09-14 21:06:13 +02:00
dcde80c4cd DockAccess: wire the new service through the Wizard 2018-09-14 21:06:13 +02:00
8755153d95 DockAccess: consider a preliminary lookup implementation within PanelLocator
PanelLocator is a sub component of the WindowLocator (top-level GUI service).
Eventually this shall become a mere widget/component access service, with the
actual lookup and allocation logic layered on top through ViewLocator, configurable
via ViewSpec-DSL.

We can not implement the full scheme right now, since we're lacking knowledge
about internals of a typical Lumiera UI widget
2018-09-14 21:06:13 +02:00
c0dca2d978 DockAccess: add lookup-by-Type function to PanelManager
...now the mess multiplies
2018-09-14 21:06:12 +02:00
987aad44c1 DockAccess: add ability to retrieve a panel via PanelManager (#1144)
This is only a premature hack, since the whole structure of PanelManager is somewhat broken.
Moreover, the ViewLocator is not really ready for use yet, so this hack at least
allows us to "reach into" a top-level window and "grab" the pannel we need.
2018-09-14 21:06:12 +02:00
e7e09a642b NotificateDisplay: delegate view allocation through a functor 2018-09-14 21:06:12 +02:00
42cbc9219f NotificateDisplay: link to a widget for error log display
The ErrorLogWidget is allocated and placed elsewhere
and not owned by the NotificationHub controller.
2018-09-14 21:06:12 +02:00
a74dc596ce WLink: finished incl. exception handling guarantees and documentation 2018-09-14 21:06:12 +02:00
ae26012bf5 WLink: implement copy operations
swap-based implementation
not sure if attachTo() should be noexcept
2018-09-14 21:06:12 +02:00
c47e3d0210 WLink: draft basic behaviour 2018-09-14 21:06:12 +02:00
e829a74edf NotificationDisplay: draft idea of managed link-to-widget
a smart-reference based on sigc::trackable
2018-09-14 21:06:12 +02:00
36abe4567e NotificationDisplay: define the actual controller behaviour to be implemented
this is specification work; for now the stubs are marked UNIMPLEMENTED
2018-09-14 21:06:12 +02:00
c2c25f8134 NotificationDisplay: define and include the unique error-Log ID 2018-09-14 21:06:12 +02:00
53c47a6fcc Assets: verify creation of ErrorLog meta-Asset 2018-09-14 21:06:12 +02:00
928b4372e0 Assets: investigating the unclear distinction between asset::Struct and asset::Meta (#1156)
including a kind-of Bugfix: the ctor of TimeGrid erroneously categorised it as asset::Kind STRUCT
2018-09-14 21:06:12 +02:00
1d69bb9050 NotificationDisplay: define a new ErrorLog asset
...for now to serve as placeholder type, used as anchor for the corresponding UI display widget
2018-09-14 21:06:12 +02:00
5475839a49 NotificationDisplay: the question where to define the entity-ID 2018-09-14 21:06:12 +02:00
12244afc90 NotificationDisplay: fill in some default implementation for the controller 2018-09-14 21:06:12 +02:00
0c8151cb2f NotificationDisplay: decide upon the architecture for handling notification messages (#1102)
* have a dedicated "information hub" controller, which acts a receiver of "error log messages" on the UI-Bus
 * let that controller in turn allocate an apropriate view on demand
2018-09-14 21:06:12 +02:00
06b3c382f3 DemoGuiRoundtrip: expand on that idea (#1099) and start analysis how to create that UI component
The goal is to build a (in itself completely meaningless) ping-pong interaction
between the UI and Proc-Layer, for the purpose of driving the integration ahead.

The immediate challenge is how to create and place an apropriate "GuiComponentView",
i.e. a Tangible, which is connected to the UI-Bus with an predictable EntryID.
And the problem is to get that settled right now, without building the envisioned
generic framework for View allocation in the UI. When this is achieved,
it should be a rather small step to actually send those notifications over
the UI-Bus, which is basically implemented and ready by now.
2018-09-14 21:06:12 +02:00
3a100972d7 UI-Lifecycle: send up a dummy notification message to indicate start of content population
right now this will just end up in the log, since not even the
notification display is implemented beyond the GuiNotification-facade.

Anyway, we get some kind of communication now for real, in the actual application
2018-08-04 19:07:21 +02:00
4e77a28112 UI-Lifecycle: use dummy-mechanism to get the new command executed
...because due of #211, we usually don't execute commands yet.
For now there is only the backdoor to prefix the command-ID with "test"

With this change, the TODO message appears now immediately after GUI start!
2018-08-04 18:45:58 +02:00
d58890e2d5 UI-Lifecycle: define a new Proc-Command to implement the population trigger (#1150) 2018-08-04 17:10:04 +02:00
eca06a8309 UI-Lifecycle: build trigger point for content population into InteractionDirector (closes #1151)
In the end, I decided against building a generic service here,
since it pretty much looks like a one-time problem.

Preferrably UI content will be pushed or pulled on demand,
rather than actively coding content from within the UI-Layer
2018-08-04 16:02:00 +02:00
4306e47930 (DOC) GTK start-up internals and design of Lumiera's UI-Layer 2018-08-03 22:33:06 +02:00
7db8bf4c0c UI-Lifecycle: research regarding GTK's activation signal. Document the findings
- activation signal is a facility offered and used solely by Gtk::Application
- we do not need nor want an Gtk::Application, we deal with our own application
  concerns as we see fit.
2018-08-03 19:28:12 +02:00
f33573daec UI-Lifecycle: note down reference point for this task in Gtk::Application
Gio::Application holds a signal_activation(), which seems to be used for
precisely that task we need here: to do something right after the UI is operative
2018-08-03 01:48:08 +02:00
d3daed9a18 UI-Lifecycle: invstigate where to issue the trigger (#1151) 2018-08-02 19:59:26 +02:00
9a39781667 UI-Lifecycle: draft a plan how to trigger content population
...and while doing so, also re-check the state of the GTK toolkit initialisation.
Looks like we're still future-proof, while cunningly avoiding all this
Gnome-style "Application" blurb
2018-07-28 19:01:23 +02:00
0c5a0fed6a UI-Lifecycle: verify and rectify start-up sequence (#1147)
...still not entirely decided yet where to plant the mechanism for
UI content retrieval (#1150)
2018-07-14 19:39:00 +02:00