Fixes: https://github.com/dankamongmen/notcurses/issues/1009
Whenever a widget is created with its `*_create` function it currently
claims full ownership of the passed panel, including its destruction.
However, the C++ wrapper around the panel is not aware of this and will
attempt to destroy the native panel in the destructor, leading to
segfaults.
Fix this by introduction of a `Widget` class which contains the logic to
properly modify the `Panel` instance to not double-destroy the native
panel. The solution is a bit fragile since the `Panel` instance is left
intact (we can't free it for the user) in a state that's safe for the
C++ wrapper, but calling any C function via the wrapper **will** pass a
`NULL` pointer in the panel argument - therefore the C functions MUST be
proofed against this. The proofing belongs in the C backend code since
this protects also C and other language binding users from such abuse.
The Widget class will first verify that the passed `Plane` instance
hasn't already been "disowned" and will throw an exception to the effect
if it was. Next, it will proceed to take over ownership of the native
panel instance and mark the passed `Panel` as "invalid" (i.e. not owning
any native panel instance anymore)
The above changes require modification of `Panel` instances and so all
the widget constructors taking `const*` or `const&` have been removed
from widget classes.
notcurses_enable_cursor() now accepts placement arguments.
both it and notcurses_disable_cursor() now return int rather
than void. add notcurses_cursor_move_yx().
* Reimplement the widget zoo demo. The previous PoC
was a multithreaded monster with behavior dependent
on screen geometry. Replace it with a single thread state
machine. Closes#936.
* Support titles for ncplot. Adds title to the ncplot_options
struct, which may be NULL. Closes#941 .
* Properly color ncplot according to maxchannels and
minchannels. Closes#940
* Add tools/function-table.sh script for generating public API list.
Maybe the type may reflect that it's not supposed to be a long now.
Although for what I've learnt about C, in practice it will probably still be a long. And I can't be sure whether in some platforms where it will indeed be a short the code will keep compiling, so maybe it's safer just to remove the outdated comment, or whatever you decide.
I'm just finding things while I work in the bindings =) And I was surprised to learn about the little guarantees C gives regarding the types sizes...
Get notcurses-tetris working again, since its collision
detection relied on simple vs non-simple EGCs, which are
no longer an operative concept. Closes#899.
not caring about endianness is the opiate of the masses.
happy, happy masses. remove endianness.h and all its baleful
influence by explicitly breaking up the cell structure. #892
* The zoo demo made manifest that we had some serious problems handling sequences of longer lines in ncplane_puttext(). This remedies most of the problems, though it's not yet perfect. #871
* Guard notcurses* for NULL in log*() #878#879
* Fix memory leak in ncdirect_dump_plane()
New reel layout algorithm based on trimming and sifting. Fixes the original issue of #818, though I'm not marking that bug fixed until I've resolved the little issues remaining with this one.
Back off CMake version dependency, see if we can get by with 3.11.4 for EPEL8 #851
Simplify tablet drawing tremendously by separating tablet border and data planes. Callbacks no longer need worry about the borders; they can simply fill the plane they're handed. #833
Improve notcurses_debug() a bit
Add ncplane_new_named() and friends to expose plane naming to the user.
Add internal ncplane_genocide() to kill a plane and all its bound descendents
New industrial-strength ncreel unit testing
notcurses-ncreel now accepts -ln for log level n
Add ncplane_parent() and ncplane_parent_const()
* use ioctl(KDGETMODE) to detect Linux console
* diagnostic on KDGETMODE
* add logdebug()
* unit test for notcurses_drop_planes(), add ncplane_putnstr_aligned()
* linuxconsole PoC
* linuxconsole: dump unicode->font table
* linuxconsole: explode glyphs
* linuxconsole: show 7 glyphs per 'line'
* linuxconjammer: shim console font with half blocks
* signals: handler for SIGTERM
* man pages: update notcurses_init() for options
* add NCOPTION_NO_FONT_CHANGES #201
Tons of work on ncreel (#627, #749, #694)
Improve reel demo: get input wired up once more, avoid the FPS demo at bottom, print pointer and line count in each tablet, use new ncreel API. Improve notcurses-ncreel explorer: kill memory leaks (#694), draw tablets better, use new ncreel API. Fix bug in ncreel core where cruft could be left on the screen, via a very gross brute force algorithm. I'll likely come back and make this a bit less ghastly in the future #749. Remove weird one-off input system from ncreel, residue from outcurses. Make some of the normalizing changes speced out in #627
* ncreel: give each tablet an index, and print it #749
* reel: eliminate FIXME + param to insert_tabler() #749
* ncreel: label tablets with their adress to correlate against debugging logs #749
* more terminal environment variable notes
* TERMS.md: add Sakura, st
* ncreel: move legend out of reel proper
* ncreel_options: dump min/max_supported_rows/cols #627
* ncreel: remove weird one-off input layer #627
* ncreel: add ncreel_offer_input()
* reel demo: call demo_getc()
* reel demo: rig up input to demo main
* ncreel: drop ncreel_del_focused(), properly bind tablets
* reel demo: don't free up necessary plane
* ncreel: don't pull absolute locations of tablets
* ncreel: place tablets correctly in boundrel
* reel demo: add back support for left/right
* reel demo: restore thread movement
* ncreel: remove a great deal of complexity
* reel demo: stay out of FPS graph's way
* ncreel: give each tablet an index, and print it #749
* reel: eliminate FIXME + param to insert_tabler() #749
* ncreel: label tablets with their adress to correlate against debugging logs #749
* ncreel: move legend out of reel proper
* ncreel_options: dump min/max_supported_rows/cols #627
* ncreel: remove weird one-off input layer #627
* ncreel: add ncreel_offer_input()
* reel demo: call demo_getc()
* reel demo: rig up input to demo main
* ncreel: drop ncreel_del_focused(), properly bind tablets
* reel demo: don't free up necessary plane
* ncreel: don't pull absolute locations of tablets
* ncreel: place tablets correctly in boundrel
* reel demo: add back support for left/right
* reel demo: restore thread movement
* ncreel: remove a great deal of complexity
* reel demo: stay out of FPS graph's way
* reel: tighten up reel following redraw
* reel: fix upper-left corner of topless perimeter
* ncreel: print linecount, return clipped value
* reel: draw focused tablet relative to reel
* reel: brute force decruftification, how embarrassing #749
CELL_ALPHA_OPAQUE et al were defined as 0..3, meaning
CELL_ALPHA_SHIFT had to be used to compare them to their
channel representations. Instead, define them in said
representation outright, eliminating the need to shift while
retaining arithmetic properties, and zero initialization for
CELL_ALPHA_OPAQUE. Eliminate CELL_ALPHA_SHIFT #738.
Add convenience function ncplane_home(). Add an ncblitter_e param
to ncplane_qrcode(), and split int maxversion into value-result
int* ymax and int* xmax. Write the actual sizes of the resulting
visual into these parameters. Update the qrcode demo. Add the
qrcode PoC. Update demos to ncplane_home(), where possible.
ncplane_qrcode() now takes an ncblitter_e and two value-result int*s
in the place of a single value int. The final size of the displayed qrcode
is written to *ymax and *xmax. If the code can't fit within the specified
dimensions, an error is returned. Standard rules for pluggable blitters
apply regarding fallback etc. #699
The Plot unit tests were reaching directly into the objects,
which meant the implementations couldn't include anything
we didn't want public. This was annoying, so I've changed it.
This required adding ncdplot_sample() and ncuplot_sample(),
which we should have had anyway.
Each plane has a "base cell", which like all other cells is
initialized to the null glyph, opaque default foreground color,
and opaque default background color. Prior to this change, at
each cell of a plane, we decided whether to use that cell (the
"viscell") or the base cell depending on whether the viscell had
a non-null glyph. We now evaluate each component independently.
If the viscell has a null glyph, we use the base cell's glyph.
If the viscell has a default foreground, we use the base's fg.
If the viscell has a default background, we use the base's bg.
This was done because (a) it seems more intuitive (if I set a cell
to red, I expect red, not red iff there's a glyph in that cell
for this plane), and (b) because otherwise it was impossible to
do a multicolor overlay without blowing away underlying glyphs
(since without a glyph, you always reduced to the same base cell,
which could have only one fore- and background per render).
Existing code will need to change any instances where cells
lacking glyphs are colored, and those colors are not desired.
Since any such coloring had no effect before, it seems unlikely
that any ought exist (this did bring to light an instance in
the "qrcode" demo where we were staining overmuch of the plane).
This closes#395, the last big open worry regarding our API.
In order to properly determine the scaling of an ncvisual to
be rendered, ncvisual_geom() needs know the blitting method.
For this reason, it took an ncblitter_e argument. It also,
however, needs handle degradation, which means knowing whether
NCVISUAL_OPTIONS_NODEGRADE is in use. It thus really wants the
struct ncvisual_options. Pass and accept it. Closes#697, and
fixes the "yield" demo in ASCII mode (#696).
Very simple take at ncplane_puttext(), a new function for linebroken text. Also some very basic unit tests. I doubt this works very well yet, but it handles the simplest cases #682. Added nclog(), internal function for logging. #520
Whip the ol' llama's ass (fix ncvisual rotation)
* notcurses: flush cursor change requests #673
* rotator: verify ncplane_rgba and ncblit_rgba
* ncblit: rename, accept ncblitter_e #674
* rotator: render from rgba
* rotator: get to rotation
* rotator: add a pi/4 turn at the end
* normal: reuse incoming plane for rendering #672
* rotator poc: rotate a fullplane gradient #672
* normal demo: place visual correctly
* rotator: verify ncplane_rgba and ncblit_rgba
* ncblit: rename, accept ncblitter_e #674
* rotator: render from rgba
* rotator: add a pi/4 turn at the end
* normal: reuse incoming plane for rendering #672
* rotator poc: rotate a fullplane gradient #672
* normal demo: place visual correctly
* rotator poc: throw some red into gradient
* rotator poc: done #662
* oiio: ncvisual_resize() needs set ibuf pointer #662
* normal: only need erase at top of loop
* visual poc: shorter delay
* normal demo: center rendered visual
* comment ncvisual_resize() call
* ncvisual_rotate: call ncvisual_details_seed()
* ffmpeg ncvisual: fix rotation #662
If we're in ASCII mode, no blitter except for NCBLIT_1x1 is going to
work. Whenever NCBLIT_DEFAULT is provided, select NCBLIT_1x1 if we're
in ASCII mode. Add NCVISUAL_OPTIONS_MAYDEGRADE and
NCPLOT_OPTIONS_MAYDEGRADE. Both serve to allow smooth degradation when a
blitter other than NCBLIT_DEFAULT has been provided. Closes#637.
Make calc_gradient_cell() static inline so our templated ncppplot
implementation can use it (ugh). When using NCBLIT_1x1 for plots in
ASCII mode, use space rather than full block, and invert colors.
Use NCBLIT_DEFAULT in the demo for the FPS plot.
This represents an essentially complete rewrite of ncvisual and associated code. It had two major goals:
Improve the ncvisual API based off lessons learned, pursuant to the upcoming API freeze. In particular, I wanted to:
decouple ncvisuals from ncplanes. It should be possible to render a ncvisual to multiple planes, with different scaling each time. It should be possible to create an ncvisual without a plane, etc.
normalize the various ways of constructing an ncvisual -- file, memory, plane, etc.
Support multiple blitters, from 7-bit ASCII to Sixel. This required writing the blitters in several cases, and they're not yet in their final implementations (but the API is fine)
I have not yet unified Plots and Visuals, and might not, given that the Plot code works fine. We could at this point implement Plots in terms of Visuals, though -- the blitter backend range has been unified. Sixel is not yet implemented, though it is listed.
There is a new POC tool, blitter. It renders its arguments using all possible blitter+scaling combinations. Another new POC, resize, displays its argument, then resizes it to the screen size and displays that, explicitly making use of ncvisual_resize() rather than a scaling parameter to ncvisual_render().
This also eliminates some memory leaks and bugs we were seeing in trunk, and brings in Sixel scaffolding.
The C++ wrapper will also need patching back up; I cut most of it down while wrestling with this crap, urk.
Closes#638, #562, and #622.
This is to make it possible, in the future, to create multiple instances
of `NotCurses` for multiple terminals. The first instance of
`NotCurses` becomes the default one, so that any instances of other
classes that aren't explicitly created with a pointer to another
`NotCurses` instance still work as expected.
Note that currently trying to call `notcurses_init` twice results in the
following error for me:
0x55555559bfc0 is already registered for signals
Couldn't drop signals: 0x55555559bfc0 != 0x5555555b6720
terminate called after throwing an instance of 'ncpp::init_error*'
Program received signal SIGABRT, Aborted.
The error is signalled by `setup_signals` and the pointer shown in the
message points to the first `struct notcurses` instance created.
Fixes: https://github.com/dankamongmen/notcurses/issues/616
SIGSEGV was caused by an invalid cast.
Short explanation: PEBKAC
Long explanation: `Selector.hh`, `Plot.hh` and `MultiSelector.hh` did
not include `Plane.hh`, they merely declared `class Plane;` because
inclusion of `Plane.hh` would cause circular dependencies to appear and
the compiler would be unhappy. On top of that, yours truly wrenched the
compiler's hands and caused it to believe that a pointer to `Plane` is
really a pointer to `ncplane*` which was quite a silly thing to do as
the compiler, not having included `Plane.hh` and thus not knowing full
definition of the type, wasn't able to look up the type cast operator in
`Plane`.
Don't abuse `reinterpret_cast`, kids!
Replace the singly-linked z-axis with a doubly-linked list,
and reimplement all z-axis moves as O(1) functions.
Eliminate ncplane_move_{above/below}_unsafe(), as there are no
longer unsafe moves.
ncplane_dup(): properly set target plane attributes/channels
ncplane_move_below_unsafe(): speedup, at most one traversal
ncplane_rgba(): accept null glyph
ncvisual_from_plane(): dup the plane, own it in ncvisual
normal: spin the visual
Unify ffmpeg/oiio/null implementations, where possible. This effectively
required placing all three in the same file, which meant they're all now
C++. Update FFmpeg implemenation to be C++-usable. Implement
ncvisual_rotate_cw() and ncvisual_rotate_ccw() #515. Move most of tetris
over to Visual from Plane #558. Add bgra_to_rgba(), necessary for
creating ncvisual from BGRA memory. Implement ncvisual_from_rgba()
and ncvisual_from_bgra() #557. Add unit tests on ncvisual rotation.
Added:
* class FDPlane (`ncfdplane*`)
* class Subproc (`ncsubproc*`)
* NotCurses: get_inputready_fd (`notcurses_inputready_fd`)
* Plane: qrcode (`ncplane_qrcode`)
* class PlotBase: templated base class for Plot variations
* class PlotU: `uint64_t` instantiation of PlotBase (aliased to previous
`Plot` class for source compatibility), `ncuplot*`
* class PlotD: `double` instantiation of PlotBase, `ncdplot*`
* ncplane_at_* and ncplane_at_cursor_*
We had notcurses_at_yx() expanding into three distinct parts of
the cell structure, and ncplane_at_yx() / ncplane_at_cursor()
writing directly to a cell. It was annoying to remember which
was which. The latter two now have a signature matching
notcurses_at_yx(), while the old functionality has been moved
to ncplane_at_yx_cell() and ncplane_at_cursor_yx(). #476
Nick prefers error handling based on exceptions in all cases, while I
prefer to save exception handling for truly exceptional situations -
function parameter validation and class constructor. However, there's no
need to not support both approaches, to be chosen at the discretion of
the developer.
NCPP follows RAII and all classes throw exceptions from their
constructors in case they cannot initialize properly. Likewise,
functions taking pointers that are required validate them and throw
exceptions whenever the requirement isn't met.
This commit goes one step further in that it enables optional validation
of notcurses function return values and throwing an
exception (`ncpp::call_error`) should the function signal an error. This
is disabled by default but it can be enabled by defining the
`NCPP_EXCEPTIONS_PLEASE` macro (preferably on the command line or
before *each* inclusion of any NCPP headers).
Out of necessity, this breaks the ABI (plus I found a handful of minor
issues in the code), but I think it's worth having this support in
place.
* packaging: s/libtinfo/Terminfo/g
* rust: add stddim_yx()
* rust: check for valid init in unit tests
* rust: serialize up tests
* constify notcurses_term_dim_yx()
* rust: add dim wrappers
* remove notcurses_resize() from public API #367
* call notcurses_resize() from notcurses_refresh() #367
Fill-type functions used to return 0 for success, and -1
on failure. They now return the number of cells written
on success, similarly to ncvisual_render(). Resolves#427.
Resolves#410. notcurses_at_yx() accepted a cell*, but the
gcluster of this cell was always set to 0. The EGC is instead
a heap-allocated copy, returned as the primary return value.
This is due to the absence of an egcpool to bind against.
Existing callers can be converted thus:
* instead of passing cell 'c', pass &(c)->attrword, &(c)->channels
* either initialize 'c' with CELL_TRIVIAL_INITIALIZER, or set its
gcluster field to 0 following the call
I've updated all calls from tests/demos, updated the docs, and
updated the C++ and Python wrappers.
Add ncplane_bound(3). This allows a new plane N to be created in the
*bound* state relative to another ncplane B. If B moves, N moves the
same amount. If N is moved, the coordinates are taken relative to B
as opposed to the standard plane. If B is destroyed, N is destroyed.
Each plane can have many planes bound to it, but can only be bound to
a single plane. Add ncplane_reparent(3). This allows a plane to be
detached from any plane to which it is bound, and optionally rebound
to a new plane. The standard plane cannot be reparented.
Documentation and unit tests have been added for both.
* tetris: use NES gravities
* tetris: use NES grav multiplier of 50ms
* tetris: implement move down #421
* README: mention notcurses-tetris #421
* tetris: use double box for boundary #421
* tetris: extract background.h
* tetris: break up into chunks suitable for book
* tetris: do the rotations
ncvisual_render() now returns the number of cells emitted
rather than just 0/-1. -1 is still returned on failure.
Rather than 0 for length meaning "all possible length", it
now means 0, and -1 means "all possible length". All demos,
tests, and PoCs have been updated. #422
ncplane_mergedown() is similar to the "Merge down" operation
in the GIMP. It writes to the destination plane the result
of rendering the source and destination frames per se.
Add four new fields to notcurses_options: margin_{tblr}, which requests margins to the top, right, bottom, and left. Render only within those margins, leaving the screen otherwise untouched (well, cleared if using the alternate screen). #293
Introduce limited plane rotation capability. We currently support clockwise and counterclockwise rotation of planes. Square and rectangular geometries are both supported, but there must be an even number of columns. The atomic unit of rotation is a 2x1 "square" (this assumes .5 cell aspect ratio). We can only rotate those glyphs which have rotated equivalents, and not even all of those. We currently handle only:
* null glyph
* space
* upper half block
* lower half block
* full block
I've added unit tests as well. This functionality is used by our Tetris example in the book
ncplane_mouseevent_p() is retired--it was poorly named, and
ncplane_translate_abs() does what it does, plus more, plus
more generally (it works on any y, x, not necessarily an
ncinput). update c++ wrappers #394.
Gradients can't use palette-indexed color, so don't allow it
in either the foreground or background of any channels. All
channels must have the same alpha setting, which will be matched
in the gradient. #389
* CMake: add USE_PANDOC, USE_DOXYGEN options #101
* README: mention rust
* start integrating rust into build #101
* CMake: add USE_NETWORK option for cargo
* Debian: build-dep on doxygen
* rust: colloquy checks in Cargo.lock
* extract NCKEY defines into their own include
* colloquy: use clap to parse CLI args
* CMake: unify option namespace
* Python: update include path
* Rust: fix up --frozen workings for -DUSE_NETWORK=off
* CMake: abstract out colloquy a little
* Sync direct.hh to the New Way
Added:
* Plane: gradient (`ncplane_gradient`)
* Plane: gradient_sized (`ncplane_gradient_sized`)
* NotCurses: drop_planes (`ncplane_drop_planes`)
* NcReel: constructor which takes `Plane&`
* Visual: constructors which take `Plane const*`, `Plane&` and `Plane const&`)
* ncpp_build: a nonsensical "demo" which exists purely to test whether
the C++ builds and does absolutely nothing interesting.
Broke:
* All exceptions throw temporary objects instead of allocated
instances. Less typing in `catch` :P (and more conventional)
ncvisual_destroy() already calls ncplane_destroy() when
appropriate. There's never a need for the C++ wrappers
to explicitly free the Visual's underlying Plane. With
this change, valgrind no longer complains upon exiting
notcurses-view(1).
Get rid of annoying empty line in notcurses-view (and ncvisuals at offsets in general)
Implement most of the Selector widget. Need to add styling and scrolling still. #166
Reenable ubuntu focal build
Subtitles! We decode them, and display them in notcurses-view. If ncvisual_simple_streamer() is provided an extra ncplane, it will use it to display subtitles. #95
We now build Python by default, as things are working much better.
ncplane_set_base() now takes channel, attrword, and EGC, so you can usually avoid having to set up and release a cell. ncplane_set_base_cell() takes over duty from ncplane_set_base() for ease of conversion.
notcurses-demo and notcurses-view now both accept a 0 for delay multiplier, meaning 'go as fast as you possibly can'. Very small multipliers (e.g. 0.00001) no longer cause floating point exceptions.
fading routines no longer cause floating point exceptions on very small timescales.
Introduce the new type 'ncdirect', a stripped-down 'notcurses'
suitable for inline modification of regular output. Used the new
type because otherwise there were going to be if(directmode) checks
everywhere. Direct mode encompasses only colorizing and styling.
Add new man page notcurses_directmode(3). Add new section to README.
Add new PoC using direct mode RGB. Update demo table summary to use
direct mode.
As it turns out, we can't portably load the initial terminal contents
(there are some hacks of various EXTREME nature, but none of them are
worth it for the rather limited benefit). The O(1)-time damage
inference requires knowledge of what was previously present to
inibit unnecessary draws. We would then need some special cell value
indicating "not yet written to" to distinguish a purposeful null
cell from an initial cell. Again, we could do this, but for what value?
Finally, the idea of clearing new area on SIGWINCH was always flawed,
as we can't do that from a signal handler.
With the advent of direct mode #77, the reason for this largely goes
away in any case.
* palette_set: update pal256 damage map #230
* drone: use newest builders
* palette: send oc on exit for color reset #285
* palette_new: copy existing palette in #230
* Python: use checkRGB everywhere
* more palette unit testing
* add ncplane_set_*_palindex()
* render fg palindex #230
* palette index color is out of 1000
* jungle demo works #253
* sync up some docs #244
* sync README and man page
* notcurses_output() man page work
* pull attr/channels from output functions #244
* witherworm: clean up explicit moves #244
* still more man page work
* notcurses_lines, last of the man pages i think
* panelreel man page #244
* debian: ruby-ronn->pandoc
* debian: full multiarch compliance
* debian: symbols file
* pandoc: fix syntax for lexgrog
* fm6.mkv: strip audio
* pandoc: fix up apropos man syntax #249
* ncurses_lines man page
* higher planes stomp wide glyphs
* broken unit test
* develop out widestomp PoC
* fix notcurses_at_yx()
* fix up dig_visible_cell() return value
* refuse wide glyph on last column #242
* set adjacent cell wide when rendering #158
* xray: eliminate weird color flicker
* witherworm: don't eat wide glyphs
* unit test for boxed glyph
* uniblock: no need to emit so many U+200Es
* witherworm: remove wide glyph hack
When we emit a glyph that has no background pixels (i.e.
the U+2588 FULL BLOCK glyph), there's no need to emit a
background color change.
Eagle demo currently has hand-coded elision. Results from
80x70 runs using the `-c` parameter:
No optimization: 12.63MiB
Hand-optimized: 12.48MiB
New scheme, no hand-coded optimization: 12.45MiB
w00t!
Allow -1 in move specification to remain where we are on that
axis (#210), necessary for context-sensitive aligned output.
Add _aligned forms to printf and vprintf. Invert various output
functions so that simpler form is static inline wrapper around
more complicated form, rather than complicated form being a
static inline composition, facilitating atomic move+output. All
output forms now have a simple form (no alignment, placement at
cursor), an _aligned() form, and a _yx() form.
Request and parse up mouse messages. We handle up to 11 mouse
buttons, 3 modifiers (currently thrown away), motion while
holding down a button, and loss/gain of focus. I've added twelve
new NCKEYs: one for each button, and one for release. In addition,
I've introduced the 'ncinput' struct, which encodes the nckey plus
extra data. The only extra data thus far is coordinates for mouse
events. It is not necessary to provide a ncinput to all input
functions; NULL can be provided if the caller doesn't care about
details. All demos are updated. notcurses-input has been updated
to decode full information of returned ncinputs.
The primary resource for this work was Dickey at al's "XTerm Control
Sequences", https://invisible-island.net/xterm/ctlseqs/ctlseqs.html.
* planereels tester #180
* suppress_banner in all tests
* tabletcb: start passing back tablet
* properly initialize fbbytes stat
* panelreel: logic fixes#178
* install all testing data
* boxdemo: clean up colors
* Fix crash on certain resizes due to corruption of damage map #152
* Rewrite ncplane_move_yx(), throwing out ~25 line of code
* implement notcurses_refresh() #150
Implement a fairly conservative, line-granularity, two-level damage map. One on the overall notcurses object is dirtied by planar moves, creations, deletions, and resizes. One on each ncplane is dirtied by glyph output, media rendering, fades, and erasure. #83 This has some definite false positives: a hidden plane which moves will damage a bunch of lines unnecessarily. For now, don't do things like that :D.
Extra byte per line per plane, shouldn't be a problem.
Two new stats for cell elisions and emissions
Allow keypress to interrupt view-demo
ncvisual_stream() now allows a callback per frame
Allow ncvisual_open() to create its own, perfectly-sized, ncplane #128
Typical performance prior to this PR:
4655 renders, 18.3s total (0.000305s min, 0.196s max, 0.0039s avg 253.9 fps)
401046.505KB total (9.688KB min, 139.697KB max, 86.15KB avg)
Emits/elides: def 1082115/116196 fg 10547624/7236460 bg 10602717/6208644
Elide rates: 9.70% 40.69% 36.93%
4680 renders, 18.4s total (0.000285s min, 0.15s max, 0.0039s avg 255.0 fps)
403078.188KB total (9.688KB min, 139.697KB max, 86.13KB avg)
Emits/elides: def 1088994/116196 fg 10604983/7267750 bg 10655426/6237472
Elide rates: 9.64% 40.66% 36.92%
4699 renders, 17.8s total (0.000227s min, 0.192s max, 0.0038s avg 263.8 fps)
403266.907KB total (9.688KB min, 139.697KB max, 85.82KB avg)
Emits/elides: def 1086511/116196 fg 10601709/7359116 bg 10661910/6326744
Elide rates: 9.66% 40.97% 37.24%
After this PR:
5625 renders, 15s total (9.36e-05s min, 0.187s max, 0.0027s avg 375.2 fps)
168365.640KB total (0.930KB min, 139.600KB max, 29.93KB avg)
Emits/elides: def 310575/116196 fg 4486002/4473416 bg 4116835/4630666
Elide rates: 27.23% 49.93% 52.94%
Cells emitted; 9928000 elided: 12572000 (55.88%)
5642 renders, 14.2s total (9.17e-05s min, 0.154s max, 0.0025s avg 397.0 fps)
168669.009KB total (0.605KB min, 139.600KB max, 29.90KB avg)
Emits/elides: def 310819/116196 fg 4499833/4482134 bg 4118562/4652470
Elide rates: 27.21% 49.90% 53.04%
Cells emitted; 9962160 elided: 12605840 (55.86%)
5650 renders, 14.3s total (0.000118s min, 0.143s max, 0.0025s avg 395.7 fps)
169461.884KB total (0.860KB min, 139.600KB max, 29.99KB avg)
Emits/elides: def 305431/116196 fg 4515396/4456376 bg 4149967/4613668
Elide rates: 27.56% 49.67% 52.65%
Cells emitted; 9945200 elided: 12654800 (55.99%)
on netcurses-demo, we're eliding about half of the total cells via this damage map. that's pretty fucking sweet! FPS increase of about 50% -- I'll take that any day of the fuckin' week, boyo. w00t!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XbGs_qK2PQA
* improved alpha macros
* demo: use new alpha macros
* add ncplane_set_*_alpha()
* explicitly set fg for uniblock
* outro: background is a space #139
* distinct alpha channels for fg/bg #139
* rename 'background' cell to 'default' #142
* doc palette fades
* uniblock-demo: reset background to black
* warning about quantization
* some luigi love
* update cell documentation
* add unit test for move of stdplane
* MoveToLowerRight unit test
* ncplane_move_yx(): error to move stdscr
* better box permutations test
* luigi in megaman2 world
* stats: don't print 'em if we haven't got 'em