Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Corrects incorrect usage of contraction for 'it is', when possessive 'its' was required.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D9250
Reviewed by Campbell Barton
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This replaces header include guards with `#pragma once`.
A couple of include guards are not removed yet (e.g. `__RNA_TYPES_H__`),
because they are used in other places.
This patch has been generated by P1561 followed by `make format`.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8466
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This removes extern-C blocks around other includes and adds
such blocks for some headers that need them.
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Needed for the snap gizmo not to steal mouse events from the tool.
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For some gizmos that follow the mouse cursor, this gets in the way.
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Makes it more clear that code using this is related to the RNA
integration of a type.
Part of T74432.
Also ran clang-format on affected files.
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NOTE: While most of the milestone 1 goals are there, a few smaller features and
improvements are still to be done.
Big picture of this milestone: Initial, OpenXR-based virtual reality support
for users and foundation for advanced use cases.
Maniphest Task: https://developer.blender.org/T71347
The tasks contains more information about this milestone.
To be clear: This is not a feature rich VR implementation, it's focused on the
initial scene inspection use case. We intentionally focused on that, further
features like controller support are part of the next milestone.
- How to use?
Instructions on how to use this are here:
https://wiki.blender.org/wiki/User:Severin/GSoC-2019/How_to_Test
These will be updated and moved to a more official place (likely the manual) soon.
Currently Windows Mixed Reality and Oculus devices are usable. Valve/HTC
headsets don't support the OpenXR standard yet and hence, do not work with this
implementation.
---------------
This is the C-side implementation of the features added for initial VR
support as per milestone 1. A "VR Scene Inspection" Add-on will be
committed separately, to expose the VR functionality in the UI. It also
adds some further features for milestone 1, namely a landmarking system
(stored view locations in the VR space)
Main additions/features:
* Support for rendering viewports to an HMD, with good performance.
* Option to sync the VR view perspective with a fully interactive,
regular 3D View (VR-Mirror).
* Option to disable positional tracking. Keeps the current position (calculated
based on the VR eye center pose) when enabled while a VR session is running.
* Some regular viewport settings for the VR view
* RNA/Python-API to query and set VR session state information.
* WM-XR: Layer tying Ghost-XR to the Blender specific APIs/data
* wmSurface API: drawable, non-window container (manages Ghost-OpenGL and GPU
context)
* DNA/RNA for management of VR session settings
* `--debug-xr` and `--debug-xr-time` commandline options
* Utility batch & config file for using the Oculus runtime on Windows.
* Most VR data is runtime only. The exception is user settings which are saved
to files (`XrSessionSettings`).
* VR support can be disabled through the `WITH_XR_OPENXR` compiler flag.
For architecture and code documentation, see
https://wiki.blender.org/wiki/Source/Interface/XR.
---------------
A few thank you's:
* A huge shoutout to Ray Molenkamp for his help during the project - it would
have not been that successful without him!
* Sebastian Koenig and Simeon Conzendorf for testing and feedback!
* The reviewers, especially Brecht Van Lommel!
* Dalai Felinto for pushing and managing me to get this done ;)
* The OpenXR working group for providing an open standard. I think we're the
first bigger application to adopt OpenXR. Congratulations to them and
ourselves :)
This project started as a Google Summer of Code 2019 project - "Core Support of
Virtual Reality Headsets through OpenXR" (see
https://wiki.blender.org/wiki/User:Severin/GSoC-2019/).
Some further information, including ideas for further improvements can be found
in the final GSoC report:
https://wiki.blender.org/wiki/User:Severin/GSoC-2019/Final_Report
Differential Revisions: D6193, D7098
Reviewed by: Brecht Van Lommel, Jeroen Bakker
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This resolves a logical problem using tweak as a fallback tool.
See: T66304#828742
The select action would immediately show the gizmo underneath it,
then the tweak would be handled by the gizmo instead of moving the item
under the cursor.
Currently this works by hiding the gizmo until the tweak event ends.
While it's simpler to check if the gizmo received a mouse-down event,
it causes flickering before each drag event which feels like a glitch.
This is optional for each gizmo type because there are cases where this
can be useful to activate the gizmo immediately (mesh rip for example).
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Implement T66304 as an experimental option,
available under the preferences "Experimental" section.
- When enabled most tools in the 3D view have a gizmo.
- Dragging outside the gizmo uses the 'fallback' tool.
- The fallback tool can be changed or disabled in the tool options
or from a pie menu (Alt-W).
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Gizmo group types now store a user count so they aren't unlinked
while other tools are using them.
The tool system now works with multiple windows.
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Minor changes to recent gizmo click/drag logic 08dff7b40bc6a
Changing the gizmos highlighted part in the invoke_prepare
callback is too error prone since it needs to run
before it's known which operator will execute.
Add back 'drag_part', since it simplifies click-drag use.
While this isn't essential with custom keymaps per gizmo
it avoids having to define a keymap in the case a drag
event needs a different action.
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Remove click-drag support for tweak gizmo,
rely on keymap events instead.
This is needed for some gizmos to use modifiers keys
without having all gizmos use all modifier keys (see: T63996).
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This allows some gizmos priority over others even when they're behind.
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Apply clang format as proposed in T53211.
For details on usage and instructions for migrating branches
without conflicts, see:
https://wiki.blender.org/wiki/Tools/ClangFormat
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While \file doesn't need an argument, it can't have another doxy
command after it.
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Move \ingroup onto same line to be more compact and
make it clear the file is in the group.
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BF-admins agree to remove header information that isn't useful,
to reduce noise.
- BEGIN/END license blocks
Developers should add non license comments as separate comment blocks.
No need for separator text.
- Contributors
This is often invalid, outdated or misleading
especially when splitting files.
It's more useful to git-blame to find out who has developed the code.
See P901 for script to perform these edits.
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Done using:
source/tools/utils_maintenance/c_sort_blocks.py
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Also move comments before members (better for clang-format).
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This allows gizmo groups to store properties in the tool.
This makes sense for gizmo options which only control gizmo display and
don't control operator execution.
Unlike similar kinds of properties,
this isn't accessible via the gizmo-group-type instance.
For now the it's only stored in the workspace tool as can be done for
operator properties, so each instance doesn't have different settings
which would be confusing from a user perspective and complicate access
from the top-bar.
Later we could add gizmo-group properties if needed.
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Allows gizmo groups to set values based on the gizmo about to be invoked.
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Allows some gizmo to be used as guides.
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Note about limits of new tool-init flag.
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This allows any operator to interactively redo without having to
manually make each operator modal.
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Edit doxy files and header guards only.
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