Several types functions were using the wording "float" historically to
mean double-precision, e.g. the float array type (which was in fact a
double array). Or the scanner function gimp_scanner_parse_float() was in
fact returning a double value. What if we wanted someday to actually add
float (usually this naming means in C the single-precision IEEE 754
floating point representation) support? How would we name this?
Now technically it's not entirely wrong (a double is still a floating
point). So I've been wondering if that is because maybe we never planned
to have float and double precision may be good enough for all usage in a
plug-in API (which doesn't have to be as generic so the higher precision
is enough)? But how can we be sure? Also we already had some functions
using the wording double (e.g. gimp_procedure_add_double_argument()), so
let's just go the safe route and use the accurate wording.
The additional change in PDB is internal, but there too, I was also
finding very confusing that we were naming double-precision float as
'float' type. So I took the opportunity to update this. It doesn't
change any signature.
In fact the whole commit doesn't change any type or code logic, only
naming, except for one bug fix in the middle which I encountered while
renaming: in gimp_scanner_parse_deprecated_color(), I discovered a
hidden bug in scanning (color-hsv*) values, which was mistakenly using a
double type for an array of float.
… PDB type.
This is a first step for #7369. Clearly our GimpObjectArray was meant to
be used with C arrays, hence the wrapper function
gimp_value_set_object_array() which was taking a C array and actually
creating and setting a GimpObjectArray.
This is why our new type is actually a C array aliased as a boxed type
and containing its own size (thanks to NULL-termination).
Eventually GimpCoreObjectArray is meant to replace GimpObjectArray.
The only issue is that such a type does not allow NULL as a valid
element in such an array, but fact is that I don't think we currently
have any use case where this matters. If ever such a case arise in the
future, we may introduce back GimpObjectArray.
In this first commit, I replaced all itemarray PDB types with a new
drawablearray using this new boxed type when relevant.
Calling gimp_selection_float from a Python plug-in could make it crash
with an error like Calling error for procedure 'gimp-selection-float':
Item x cannot be used because it is not a group item.
This is caused by an incorrect check for group layers.
gimp_pdb_item_is_group returns an error when the condition is False,
while we only want an error when a group layer is selected (True).
Thus we need to use gimp_pdb_item_is_not_group, which returns an error
when the item is a group, which is what we want.
These function names are a little confusing, we might need to think
about better naming sometime.
I added C/Python tests for this function, so that we can test whether
this works correctly.
This fixes bugs introduced in commit a7c59277fb where I obviously didn't
properly checked all the places where gimp_selection_float() was used
after its parameters changed.
Add a "gboolean edge_lock" parameter to GimpChannel::feather() and a
"Selected areas continue outside the image" toggle to the "Feather
Selection" dialog, just like they exist for shrink selection and
border selection. At the end, convert the boolean to the right abyss
policy for gegl:gaussian-blur.
Make sure a channel -> selection -> channel roundtrip never does any
gamma conversion.
In gimp_channel_duplicate(), make sure a created channel has the
right format, and the right data. Fixes selection -> channel.
When switching off quick mask, call gimp_item_to_selection() instead
if gimp_selection_load(), the latter was implementing a shortcut which
is now wrong.
Remove gimp_selection_load() which is now unused.
Unrelated: also remove gimp_selection_save(), it was an obvious
3-liner used only twice.
It never belonged inside "tools". Also rename its "pdb" subdirectory
to "groups". This had to happen before 2.10 so cherry-picking between
branches doesn't become a nightmare in the future.
2017-12-17 14:16:08 -05:00
Renamed from tools/pdbgen/pdb/selection.pdb (Browse further)