now that we have long-opts, we don't have to worry about exhausting the
alphabet list for short-opts. so adding a cli flag to set/unset the
checker background makes sense.
ref: https://codeberg.org/nsxiv/nsxiv/issues/404
this will be a massive change compared to the usual stuff. however the
gains will be worth it:
* we gain lots of additional animated image support.
* and we'll gain _even_ more format support as imlib2 adds them, without needing
any change in our code-base.
* about ~300 LoC will be purged once we remove our internal gif and webp loader.
as for when to remove the internal loaders, a good time might be when debian
upgrades their imlib2, currently it seems to be at v1.7.5, which doesn't support
animated images.
as of now, nsxiv will continue to build with the internal gif/webp loaders
(assuming they were enabled in config.mk) if imlib2 version is below 1.8.0 and
will print out a deprecation notice.
and if imlib2 version supports multi-frame then it will simply ignore the
internal loaders and use the imlib2 one.
in other words, users shouldn't need to do anything on their side. everything
that previously functioned will continue to function regardless of the user's
imlib2 version (though they might see the annoying deprecation notice if the
imlib2 version doesn't support multi-frame images).
known issue:
* image loading performance can be noticeably worse in
imlib2 versions below 1.9.0
Closes: https://codeberg.org/nsxiv/nsxiv/issues/301
Closes: https://codeberg.org/nsxiv/nsxiv/issues/300
Reviewed-on: https://codeberg.org/nsxiv/nsxiv/pulls/373
Reviewed-by: TAAPArthur <taaparthur@noreply.codeberg.org>
* Imlib2 supports modifying gamma, brightness and contrast directly
while sxiv only supports gamma. Makes sense to extend it to brightness
and contrast as well.
* Since color corrections need to be aware of each other, they have been
refactored into one centralized function.
* This also makes the code more hackable as it makes it easier to add
more color correction functions without them interfering with each
other.
Co-authored-by: 0ion9 <finticemo@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: NRK <nrk@disroot.org>
Reviewed-on: https://codeberg.org/nsxiv/nsxiv/pulls/396
Reviewed-by: NRK <nrk@disroot.org>
Reviewed-by: TAAPArthur <taaparthur@noreply.codeberg.org>
Co-authored-by: Berke Kocaoğlu <kberke@metu.edu.tr>
Co-committed-by: Berke Kocaoğlu <kberke@metu.edu.tr>
allows for developers to more easily run the analysis locally before
opening a pull request if they wish.
also disables a noisy warning (bugprone-assignment-in-if-condition)
producing too many false positives.
Reviewed-on: https://codeberg.org/nsxiv/nsxiv/pulls/395
Reviewed-by: Berke Kocaoğlu <kberke@metu.edu.tr>
Co-authored-by: NRK <nrk@disroot.org>
Co-committed-by: NRK <nrk@disroot.org>
this will hopefully catch issues like [337] in the future.
not using gcc and/or clang since we have 5 build options right now,
which means 2^5 = 32 different combination. using gcc/clang would take
too much resources and time; meanwhile tcc is lightning fast.
[337]: https://codeberg.org/nsxiv/nsxiv/pulls/337
Reviewed-on: https://codeberg.org/nsxiv/nsxiv/pulls/338
Reviewed-by: eylles <eylles@noreply.codeberg.org>
simply running nsxiv with `--anti-alias` will enable anti-aliasing, and
running it with `--anti-alias=no` will disable it.
the cli flag will overwrite the config.h default.
Closes: https://codeberg.org/nsxiv/nsxiv/issues/349
* disable `cert-err33-c` and `readability-identifier-length` check
which causes warnings on clang-tidy v14.
* disable all "readability" checks by default, instead just opt-into the
useful ones (such as duplicate include).
Reviewed-on: https://codeberg.org/nsxiv/nsxiv/pulls/365
Reviewed-by: Berke Kocaoğlu <berke.kocaoglu@metu.edu.tr>
* link to online man-page
* rename: "N-R-K" -> "NRK"
* separate multiple links with a comma.
otherwise the links get messed up due to `[] []` being valid syntax for
reference style links with the 2nd `[]` serving as `id`.
* prefer codeberg links over github ones
Reviewed-on: https://codeberg.org/nsxiv/nsxiv/pulls/362
Reviewed-by: explosion-mental <explosion-mental@noreply.codeberg.org>
Uses [optparse] to add support for long-opts. optparse is posix
compliant with getopt(3) and thus would be backwards compatible.
It does not have any dependency (not even the c standard library!) and
is C89 compatible and thus fits our current code-style.
[optparse]: https://github.com/skeeto/optparse
Note that we're using a couple `pragma`-s to silence some harmless
warnings. This should be portable because these pragma-s don't change the
behavior of the program. Furthermore, C standard mandates that unknown
pragma's should be ignored by the compiler and thus would not result in
build failure on compilers which do not recognize them.
Closes: https://codeberg.org/nsxiv/nsxiv/issues/328
Reviewed-on: https://codeberg.org/nsxiv/nsxiv/pulls/332
Reviewed-by: eylles <eylles@noreply.codeberg.org>
This is mainly just to reduce the amount of files in the project root.
The criteria of what gets into `etc/` are the following:
* The file should not be necessary for building nsxiv. This excludes the
`icon/*` stuff since that's needed by `window.c`.
* The file shouldn't have any valid reason to stay in the project root.
This excludes things like `README.md`, `.gitignore` etc.
Reviewed-on: https://codeberg.org/nsxiv/nsxiv/pulls/350
Reviewed-by: explosion-mental <explosion-mental@noreply.codeberg.org>