Documentation ¶
Overview ¶
Package oswin provides interfaces for OS-specific GUI hardware for portable two-dimensional graphics and input events.
The App interface provides a top-level, single-instance struct that knows about specific hardware, and can create new Window and Texture objects that are hardware-specific and provide the primary GUI interface. It is always available as oswin.TheApp.
Events are communicated through the Window -- see EventType and Event in event.go for all the different types.
The driver package creates the App, via its Main function, which is designed to be called by the program's main function. There can be multiple different drivers, but currently OpenGL on top of the glfw cross-platform library (i.e., the vkos driver) is the only one supported. See internal/*driver for older shiny-based drivers that are completely OS-specific and do not require cgo for Windows and X11 platforms (but do require it for mac). These older drivers are no longer compatible with the current GPU-based 3D rendering system in gi and gi3d.
package gi/gimain provides the Main method used to initialize the oswin driver that implements the oswin interfaces, and start the main event processing loop.
See examples in gi/examples directory for current example code.
Index ¶
- Variables
- func LogicalFmPhysicalDPI(logScale, pdpi float32) float32
- func SendCustomEvent(win Window, data interface{})
- func SetLogicalDPIScale(scrnName string, dpiScale float32)
- func WindowFlagsToBool(flags int64) (dialog, modal, tool, fullscreen bool)
- type App
- type CustomEvent
- type Event
- type EventBase
- type EventDeque
- type EventType
- type MainMenu
- type Menu
- type MenuItem
- type NewWindowOptions
- type Platforms
- type Screen
- type ScreenOrientation
- type Window
- type WindowBase
- func (w *WindowBase) Flags() int64
- func (w *WindowBase) IsDialog() bool
- func (w *WindowBase) IsFocus() bool
- func (w *WindowBase) IsFullscreen() bool
- func (w *WindowBase) IsMinimized() bool
- func (w *WindowBase) IsModal() bool
- func (w *WindowBase) IsTool() bool
- func (w WindowBase) Name() string
- func (w WindowBase) Parent() interface{}
- func (w *WindowBase) SetDestroyGPUResourcesFunc(f func())
- func (w *WindowBase) SetName(name string)
- func (w *WindowBase) SetParent(parent interface{})
- func (w WindowBase) Title() string
- type WindowFlags
Constants ¶
This section is empty.
Variables ¶
var ( // ZoomFactor is a multiplier on screen LogicalDPI ZoomFactor = float32(1.0) // LogicalDPIScale is the default scaling factor for Logical DPI // as a multiplier on Physical DPI. // Smaller numbers produce smaller font sizes etc. LogicalDPIScale = float32(1.0) // LogicalDPIScales are per-screen name versions of LogicalDPIScale // these can be set from preferences (as in gi/prefs) on a per-screen // basis. LogicalDPIScales map[string]float32 )
var InitScreenLogicalDPIFunc func()
InitScreenLogicalDPIFunc is a function that can be set to initialize the screen LogicalDPI values based on user preferences etc. Called just before first window is opened.
var KiT_EventType = kit.Enums.AddEnum(EventTypeN, kit.NotBitFlag, nil)
var KiT_Platforms = kit.Enums.AddEnum(PlatformsN, kit.NotBitFlag, nil)
var KiT_ScreenOrientation = kit.Enums.AddEnum(ScreenOrientationN, kit.NotBitFlag, nil)
var KiT_WindowFlags = kit.Enums.AddEnum(WindowFlagsN, kit.BitFlag, nil)
Functions ¶
func LogicalFmPhysicalDPI ¶
LogicalFmPhysicalDPI computes the logical DPI used in actual screen scaling based on the given logical DPI scale factor (logScale), and also makes it a multiple of 6 to make normal font sizes look best.
func SendCustomEvent ¶
func SendCustomEvent(win Window, data interface{})
SendCustomEvent sends a new custom event to given window, with given data -- constructs the event and sends it. For other params you can follow these steps yourself..
func SetLogicalDPIScale ¶ added in v1.3.7
SetLogicalDPIScale sets the LogicalDPIScale factor for given screen name
func WindowFlagsToBool ¶
Types ¶
type App ¶
type App interface { // Platform returns the platform type -- can use this for conditionalizing // behavior in minor, simple ways Platform() Platforms // Name is the overall name of the application -- used for specifying an // application-specific preferences directory, etc Name() string // SetName sets the application name -- defaults to GoGi if not otherwise set SetName(name string) // GetScreens gets the current list of screens GetScreens() // NScreens returns the number of different logical and/or physical // screens managed under this overall screen hardware NScreens() int // Screen returns screen for given screen number, or nil if not a // valid screen number. Screen(scrN int) *Screen // ScreenByName returns screen for given screen name, or nil if not a // valid screen name. ScreenByName(name string) *Screen // NoScreens returns true if there are no active screens currently // (e.g., for a closed laptop with no external monitor attached) // The previous list of Screens is retained so this is the check. NoScreens() bool // NWindows returns the number of windows open for this app. NWindows() int // Window returns given window in list of windows opened under this screen // -- list is not in any guaranteed order, but typically in order of // creation (see also WindowByName) -- returns nil for invalid index. Window(win int) Window // WindowByName returns given window in list of windows opened under this // screen, by name -- nil if not found. WindowByName(name string) Window // WindowInFocus returns the window currently in focus (receiving keyboard // input) -- could be nil if none are. WindowInFocus() Window // ContextWindow returns the window passed as context for clipboard, cursor, etc calls. ContextWindow() Window // NewWindow returns a new Window for this screen. A nil opts is valid and // means to use the default option values. NewWindow(opts *NewWindowOptions) (Window, error) // ClipBoard returns the clip.Board handler for the system, in context of given window. ClipBoard(win Window) clip.Board // Cursor returns the cursor.Cursor handler for the system, in context of given window. Cursor(win Window) cursor.Cursor // PrefsDir returns the OS-specific preferences directory: Mac: ~/Library, // Linux: ~/.config, Windows: ? PrefsDir() string // GoGiPrefsDir returns the GoGi preferences directory: PrefsDir + GoGi -- // ensures that the directory exists first. GoGiPrefsDir() string // AppPrefsDir returns the application-specific preferences directory: // PrefsDir + App.Name --ensures that the directory exists first. AppPrefsDir() string // FontPaths returns the default system font paths. FontPaths() []string // About is an informative message about the app. Can use HTML // formatting, including links. About() string // SetAbout sets the about info. SetAbout(about string) // OpenURL opens the given URL in the user's default browser. On Linux // this requires that xdg-utils package has been installed -- uses // xdg-open command. OpenURL(url string) // OpenFiles returns file names that have been set to be open at startup. OpenFiles() []string // SetQuitReqFunc sets the function that is called whenever there is a // request to quit the app (via a OS or a call to QuitReq() method). That // function can then adjudicate whether and when to actually call Quit. SetQuitReqFunc(fun func()) // SetQuitCleanFunc sets the function that is called whenever app is // actually about to quit (irrevocably) -- can do any necessary // last-minute cleanup here. SetQuitCleanFunc(fun func()) // QuitReq is a quit request, triggered either by OS or user call (e.g., // via Quit menu action) -- calls function previously-registered by // SetQuitReqFunc, which is then solely responsible for actually calling // Quit. QuitReq() // IsQuitting returns true when the app is actually quitting -- it is set // to true just before the QuitClean function is called, and before all // the windows are closed. IsQuitting() bool // QuitClean calls the function setup in SetQuitCleanFunc and does other // app cleanup -- called on way to quitting. QuitClean() // Quit closes all windows and exits the program. Quit() // RunOnMain runs given function on main thread (where main event loop is running) // Some functions (GUI-specific etc) must run on this initial main thread for the // overall app. RunOnMain(f func()) // GoRunOnMain runs given function on main thread and returns immediately // Some functions (GUI-specific etc) must run on this initial main thread for the // overall app. GoRunOnMain(f func()) // SendEmptyEvent sends an empty, blank event to global event processing // system, which has the effect of pushing the system along during cases when // the event loop needs to be "pinged" to get things moving along. // See also similar method on Window. SendEmptyEvent() // PollEvents tells the main event loop to check for any gui events right now. // Call this periodically from longer-running functions to ensure // GUI responsiveness. PollEvents() }
App represents the overall OS GUI hardware, and creates Images, Textures and Windows, appropriate for that hardware / OS, and maintains data about the physical screen(s)
var TheApp App
TheApp is the current oswin App -- only ever one in effect
type CustomEvent ¶
type CustomEvent struct { EventBase Data interface{} PosAvail bool `desc:"set to true if position is available"` Where image.Point `desc:"position info if relevant -- set PosAvail"` Focus bool `desc:"set to true if this event should be sent to widget in focus"` }
CustomEvent is a user-specified event that can be sent and received as needed, and contains a Data field for arbitrary data, and optional position and focus parameters
func (CustomEvent) HasPos ¶
func (ce CustomEvent) HasPos() bool
func (CustomEvent) OnFocus ¶
func (ce CustomEvent) OnFocus() bool
func (CustomEvent) OnWinFocus ¶ added in v1.1.3
func (ce CustomEvent) OnWinFocus() bool
func (CustomEvent) Pos ¶
func (ce CustomEvent) Pos() image.Point
func (CustomEvent) String ¶
func (ce CustomEvent) String() string
func (CustomEvent) Type ¶
func (ce CustomEvent) Type() EventType
type Event ¶
type Event interface { fmt.Stringer // Type returns the type of event associated with given event Type() EventType // HasPos returns true if the event has a window position where it takes place HasPos() bool // Pos returns the position in raw display dots (pixels) where event took place -- needed for sending events to the right place Pos() image.Point // OnFocus returns true if the event operates only on focus item (e.g., keyboard events) OnFocus() bool // OnWinFocus returns true if the event operates only when the window has focus OnWinFocus() bool // Time returns the time at which the event was generated, in UnixNano nanosecond units Time() time.Time // IsProcessed returns whether this event has already been processed IsProcessed() bool // SetProcessed marks the event as having been processed SetProcessed() // Init sets the time to now, and any other init -- done just prior to event delivery Init() // SetTime sets the event time to Now SetTime() }
Event is the interface for oswin GUI events. also includes Stringer to get a string description of the event
type EventBase ¶
type EventBase struct { // GenTime records the time when the event was first generated, using more // efficient nptime struct GenTime nptime.Time // Processed indicates if the event has been processed by an end receiver, // and thus should no longer be processed by other possible receivers. // Atomic operations are used to encode a 0 or 1, so it is an int32. Processed int32 }
EventBase is the base type for events -- records time and whether event has been processed by a receiver of the event -- in which case it is skipped
func (*EventBase) ClearProcessed ¶ added in v1.0.5
func (ev *EventBase) ClearProcessed()
func (EventBase) IsProcessed ¶
func (EventBase) OnWinFocus ¶ added in v1.1.3
func (*EventBase) SetProcessed ¶
func (ev *EventBase) SetProcessed()
type EventDeque ¶
type EventDeque interface { // Send adds an event to the end of the deque. They are returned by // NextEvent in FIFO order. Send(event Event) // SendFirst adds an event to the start of the deque. They are returned by // NextEvent in LIFO order, and have priority over events sent via Send. SendFirst(event Event) // NextEvent returns the next event in the deque. It blocks until such an // event has been sent. NextEvent() Event // PollEvent returns the next event in the deque if available, returns true // returns false and does not wait if no events currently available PollEvent() (Event, bool) }
EventDeque is an infinitely buffered double-ended queue of events.
type EventType ¶
type EventType int64
EventType determines which type of GUI event is being sent -- need this for indexing into different event signalers based on event type, and sending event type in signals -- critical to break up different event types into the right categories needed for different types of widgets -- e.g., most do not need move or scroll events, so those are separated.
const ( // MouseEvent includes all mouse button actions, but not move or drag MouseEvent EventType = iota // MouseMoveEvent is when the mouse is moving but no button is down MouseMoveEvent // MouseDragEvent is when the mouse is moving and there is a button down MouseDragEvent // MouseScrollEvent is for mouse scroll wheel events MouseScrollEvent // MouseFocusEvent is for mouse focus (enter / exit of widget area) -- // generated by gi.Window based on mouse move events MouseFocusEvent // MouseHoverEvent is for mouse hover -- generated by gi.Window based on // mouse events MouseHoverEvent // KeyEvent for key pressed or released -- fine-grained data about each // key as it happens KeyEvent // KeyChordEvent is only generated when a non-modifier key is released, // and it also contains a string representation of the full chord, // suitable for translation into keyboard commands, emacs-style etc KeyChordEvent // TouchEvent is a generic touch-based event TouchEvent // MagnifyEvent is a touch-based magnify event (e.g., pinch) MagnifyEvent // RotateEvent is a touch-based rotate event RotateEvent // WindowEvent reports any changes in the window size, orientation, // iconify, close, open, paint -- these are all "internal" events // from OS to GUI system, and not sent to widgets WindowEvent // WindowResizeEvent is specifically for window resize events which need // special treatment -- this is an internal event not sent to widgets WindowResizeEvent // WindowPaintEvent is specifically for window paint events which need // special treatment -- this is an internal event not sent to widgets, // triggered right after window is opened for initial painting. WindowPaintEvent // WindowShowEvent is a synthetic event sent to widget consumers, // sent *only once* when window is shown for the very first time WindowShowEvent // WindowFocusEvent is a synthetic event sent to widget consumers, // sent when window focus changes (action is Focus / DeFocus) WindowFocusEvent // DNDEvent is for the Drag-n-Drop (DND) drop event DNDEvent // DNDMoveEvent is when the DND position has changed DNDMoveEvent // DNDFocusEvent is for Enter / Exit events of the DND into / out of a given widget DNDFocusEvent // OSEvent is an operating system generated event (app level typically) OSEvent // OSOpenFilesEvent is an event telling app to open given files OSOpenFilesEvent // CustomEventType is a user-defined event with a data interface{} field CustomEventType // number of event types EventTypeN )
func (*EventType) FromString ¶
type MainMenu ¶
type MainMenu interface { // Window returns the window that this menu is attached to. Window() Window // SetWindow sets the window associated with this main menu. SetWindow(win Window) // SetFunc sets the callback function that is called whenever a menu item is selected. SetFunc(fun func(win Window, title string, tag int)) // Triggered is called when a menu item is triggered via OS -- calls // callback function set in SetFunc. Triggered(win Window, title string, tag int) // Menu returns the menu pointer for the main menu associated with window. // only for READ ONLY purposes -- use StartUpdate when starting to update it. Menu() Menu // SetMenu sets the menu as the main menu for the window -- generally call this // in response to a window.FocusEvent, after building the menu SetMenu() // StartUpdate locks the menu pointer for the main menu associated with window. // only for READ ONLY purposes -- use StartUpdate when starting to update it. StartUpdate() Menu // EndUpdate unlocks the current update -- must be matched with StartUpdate EndUpdate(men Menu) // Reset resets all items on given menu -- do this before updating. Reset(men Menu) // AddSubMenu adds a sub-menu of given title / label to given menu. AddSubMenu(men Menu, title string) Menu // AddItem adds a menu item of given title / label, shortcut, and tag to // given menu. Callback function set by SetFunc will be called when menu // item is selected. AddItem(men Menu, title string, shortcut string, tag int, active bool) MenuItem // AddSeparator adds a separator menu item. AddSeparator(men Menu) // ItemByTitle finds menu item by title on given menu -- does not iterate // over sub-menus, so that needs to be done manually. ItemByTitle(men Menu, title string) MenuItem // ItemByTag finds menu item by tag on given menu -- does not iterate // over sub-menus, so that needs to be done manually. ItemByTag(men Menu, tag int) MenuItem // SetItemActive sets the active status of given item. SetItemActive(mitem MenuItem, active bool) }
MainMenu supports the OS-specific main menu associated with a window.
type NewWindowOptions ¶
type NewWindowOptions struct { // Size specifies the dimensions of the new window, either in raw pixels // or std 96 dpi pixels depending on StdPixels. If Width or Height are // zero, a driver-dependent default will be used for each zero value // dimension Size image.Point // StdPixels means use standardized "pixel" units for the window size (96 // per inch), not the actual underlying raw display dot pixels StdPixels bool // Pos specifies the position of the window, if non-zero -- always in // device-specific raw pixels Pos image.Point // Title specifies the window title. Title string // Flags can be set using WindowFlags to request different types of windows Flags int64 }
NewWindowOptions are optional arguments to NewWindow.
func (*NewWindowOptions) Fixup ¶
func (o *NewWindowOptions) Fixup()
Fixup fills in defaults and updates everything based on current screen and window context Specific hardware can fine-tune this as well, in driver code
func (*NewWindowOptions) GetTitle ¶
func (o *NewWindowOptions) GetTitle() string
GetTitle returns a sanitized form of o.Title. In particular, its length will not exceed 4096, and it may be further truncated so that it is valid UTF-8 and will not contain the NUL byte.
o may be nil, in which case "" is returned.
func (*NewWindowOptions) SetDialog ¶
func (o *NewWindowOptions) SetDialog()
func (*NewWindowOptions) SetFullscreen ¶
func (o *NewWindowOptions) SetFullscreen()
func (*NewWindowOptions) SetModal ¶
func (o *NewWindowOptions) SetModal()
func (*NewWindowOptions) SetTool ¶
func (o *NewWindowOptions) SetTool()
type Platforms ¶
type Platforms int32
Platforms are all the supported platforms for OSWin
func (*Platforms) FromString ¶
type Screen ¶
type Screen struct { // ScreenNumber is the index of this screen in the list of screens // maintained under Screen. ScreenNumber int // Geometry contains the geometry of the screen in window manager // size units, which may not be same as raw pixels Geometry image.Rectangle // DevicePixelRatio is a factor that scales the screen's // "natural" pixel coordinates into actual device pixels. // On OS-X it is backingScaleFactor = 2.0 on "retina" DevicePixelRatio float32 // PixSize is the number of actual pixels in the screen // computed as Size * DevicePixelRatio PixSize image.Point // PhysicalSize is the actual physical size of the screen, in mm. PhysicalSize image.Point // LogicalDPI is the logical dots per inch of the screen, // which is used for all rendering. It is set as a function of the // global ZoomFactor and the LogicalDPIScale, either the global // or per-screen name version if it exists. LogicalDPI float32 // PhysicalDPI is the physical dots per inch of the screen, // for generating true-to-physical-size output, for example // see the gi/units package for translating into various other // units. PhysicalDPI float32 // Color depth of the screen, in bits. Depth int // Refresh rate in Hz RefreshRate float32 Orientation ScreenOrientation NativeOrientation ScreenOrientation PrimaryOrientation ScreenOrientation Name string Manufacturer string Model string SerialNumber string }
Screen contains data about each physical and / or logical screen
func (*Screen) ConstrainWinGeom ¶ added in v1.3.7
ConstrainWinGeom constrains window geometry to fit in the screen. Size is in pixel units.
func (*Screen) UpdateLogicalDPI ¶ added in v1.3.7
func (sc *Screen) UpdateLogicalDPI()
UpdateLogicalDPI updates the logical DPI of the screen based on ZoomFactor and LogicalDPIScale (per screen if exists)
func (*Screen) WinSizeFmPix ¶ added in v1.3.7
WinSizeFmPix returns window manager size units (where DevicePixelRatio is ignored) converted from pixel units -- i.e., divide by DevicePixelRatio
type ScreenOrientation ¶
type ScreenOrientation int32
ScreenOrientation is the orientation of the device screen.
const ( // OrientationUnknown means device orientation cannot be determined. // // Equivalent on Android to Configuration.ORIENTATION_UNKNOWN // and on iOS to: // UIDeviceOrientationUnknown // UIDeviceOrientationFaceUp // UIDeviceOrientationFaceDown OrientationUnknown ScreenOrientation = iota // Portrait is a device oriented so it is tall and thin. // // Equivalent on Android to Configuration.ORIENTATION_PORTRAIT // and on iOS to: // UIDeviceOrientationPortrait // UIDeviceOrientationPortraitUpsideDown Portrait // Landscape is a device oriented so it is short and wide. // // Equivalent on Android to Configuration.ORIENTATION_LANDSCAPE // and on iOS to: // UIDeviceOrientationLandscapeLeft // UIDeviceOrientationLandscapeRight Landscape ScreenOrientationN )
func (*ScreenOrientation) FromString ¶
func (i *ScreenOrientation) FromString(s string) error
func (ScreenOrientation) String ¶
func (i ScreenOrientation) String() string
type Window ¶
type Window interface { // Name returns the name of the window -- name is used strictly for // internal tracking and finding of windows -- see Title for the displayed // title of the window. Name() string // SetName sets the name of the window. SetName(name string) // Title returns the current title of the window, which is displayed in the GUI. Title() string // SetTitle sets the current title of the window, which is displayed in the GUI. SetTitle(title string) // Size returns the current size of the window, in raw underlying dots / pixels. // This includes any high DPI factors that may not be used in OS window sizing // (see WinSize for that size). Size() image.Point // WinSize returns the current size of the window, in OS-specific window manager // units that may not include any high DPI factors. WinSize() image.Point // Position returns the current left-top position of the window relative to // underlying screen, in OS-specific window manager coordinates. Position() image.Point // SetWinSize sets the size of the window, in OS-specific window manager // units that may not include any high DPI factors (DevPixRatio) // (i.e., the same units as returned in WinSize()) SetWinSize(sz image.Point) // SetSize sets the size of the window, in actual pixel units // (i.e., the same units as returned by Size()) // Divides by DevPixRatio before calling SetWinSize. SetSize(sz image.Point) // SetPos sets the position of the window, in OS window manager // coordinates, which may be different from Size() coordinates // that reflect high DPI SetPos(pos image.Point) // SetGeom sets the position and size in one call -- use this if doing // both because sequential calls to SetPos and SetSize might fail on some // platforms. Size is in actual pixel units (i.e., same units as returned by Size()), // and Pos is in OS-specific window manager units (i.e., as returned in Pos()) SetGeom(pos image.Point, sz image.Point) // Raise requests that the window be at the top of the stack of windows, // and receive focus. If it is iconified, it will be de-iconified. This // is the only supported mechanism for de-iconifying. Raise() // Minimize requests that the window be iconified, making it no longer // visible or active -- rendering should not occur for minimized windows. Minimize() // PhysicalDPI is the physical dots per inch of the window, for generating // true-to-physical-size output, for example -- see the gi/units package for // translating into various other units. PhysicalDPI() float32 // LogicalDPI returns the current logical dots-per-inch resolution of the // window, which should be used for most conversion of standard units -- // physical DPI can be found in the Screen. LogicalDPI() float32 // SetLogicalDPI sets the current logical dots-per-inch resolution of the // window, which should be used for most conversion of standard units -- // physical DPI can be found in the Screen. SetLogicalDPI(dpi float32) // Screen returns the screen for this window, with all the relevant // information about its properties. Screen() *Screen // Parent returns the parent object of a given window -- for GoGi it is a // gi.Window but could be something else in other frameworks. Parent() interface{} // SetParent sets the parent object of a given window -- for GoGi it is a // gi.Window but could be something else in other frameworks. SetParent(par interface{}) // MainMenu returns the OS-level main menu for this window -- this is // currently for MacOS only -- returns nil for others. MainMenu() MainMenu // Flags returns the bit flags for this window's properties set according // to WindowFlags bits. Flags() int64 // IsDialog returns true if this is a dialog window. IsDialog() bool // IsModal returns true if this is a modal window (blocks input to other windows). IsModal() bool // IsTool returns true if this is a tool window. IsTool() bool // IsFullscreen returns true if this is a fullscreen window. IsFullscreen() bool // IsMinimized returns true if this window is minimized. See also IsVisible() IsMinimized() bool // IsFocus returns true if this window is focused (will receive keyboard input etc). IsFocus() bool // IsClosed returns true if this window has been closed (but some threads // may have not received the news yet) IsClosed() bool // IsVisible returns true if this window is not closed or minimized and // there are active screens IsVisible() bool // SetCloseReqFunc sets the function that is called whenever there is a // request to close the window (via a OS or a call to CloseReq() method). That // function can then adjudicate whether and when to actually call Close. SetCloseReqFunc(fun func(win Window)) // SetCloseCleanFunc sets the function that is called whenever window is // actually about to close (irrevocably) -- can do any necessary // last-minute cleanup here. SetCloseCleanFunc(fun func(win Window)) // CloseReq is a close request, triggered either by OS or user call (e.g., // via Close menu action) -- calls function previously-registered by // SetCloseReqFunc, which is then solely responsible for actually calling // Close. CloseReq() // CloseClean calls the function setup in SetCloseCleanFunc and does other // window cleanup -- called on way to closing. CloseClean() // Close requests that the window be closed. The behavior of the Window // after this, whether calling its methods or passing it as an argument, // is undefined. See App.Quit methods to quit overall app. Close() // RunOnWin runs given function on the window's own separate goroutine RunOnWin(f func()) // GoRunOnWin runs given function on the window's unique locked thread // and returns immediately. GoRunOnWin(f func()) // SendEmptyEvent sends an empty, blank event to this window, which just has // the effect of pushing the system along during cases when the window // event loop needs to be "pinged" to get things moving along.. SendEmptyEvent() // Handle returns the driver-specific handle for this window. // Currently, for all platforms, this is *glfw.Window, but that // cannot always be assumed. Only provided for unforeseen emergency use -- // please file an Issue for anything that should be added to Window // interface. Handle() interface{} // OSHandle returns the OS-specific underlying window handle: // MacOS: NSWindow*, Windows: HWND, LinuxX11: X11Window OSHandle() uintptr // Sets the mouse position to given values SetMousePos(x, y float64) // Sets the mouse cursor to be enabled (true by default) or disabled (false). // If disabled, setting raw to true will enable raw mouse movement // which can provide better control in a game environment (not avail on Mac). SetCursorEnabled(enabled, raw bool) // Drawer returns the drawing system attached to this window surface. // This is typically used for high-performance rendering to the surface. Drawer() *vdraw.Drawer // SetDestroyGPUResourcesFunc sets the given function // that will be called on the main thread just prior // to destroying the drawer and surface. SetDestroyGPUResourcesFunc(f func()) EventDeque }
Window is a double-buffered OS-specific hardware window.
It provides basic GPU support functions, and is currently implemented via Vulkan on top of glfw cross-platform window mgmt toolkit (see driver/vkos). using the vgpu framework.
The Window maintains its own vdraw.Drawer drawing system for rendering bitmap images and filled regions onto the window surface.
The base full-window image should be drawn with a Scale call first, followed by any overlay images such as sprites or direct upload images already on the GPU (e.g., from 3D render frames)
vgpu.MaxTexturesPerSet = 16 to work cross-platform, meaning that a maximum of 16 images per descriptor set can be uploaded and be ready to use in one render pass. gi.Window uses multiple sets to get around this limitation.
type WindowBase ¶
type WindowBase struct { Nm string Titl string Pos image.Point WnSize image.Point // window-manager coords PxSize image.Point // pixel size DevPixRatio float32 PhysDPI float32 LogDPI float32 Par interface{} Flag int64 // set this to a function that will destroy GPU resources // in the main thread prior to destroying the drawer // and the surface -- otherwise it is difficult to // ensure that the proper ordering of destruction applies. DestroyGPUfunc func() }
WindowBase provides a base-level implementation of the generic data aspects of the window, including maintaining the current window size and dpi
func (*WindowBase) Flags ¶
func (w *WindowBase) Flags() int64
func (*WindowBase) IsDialog ¶
func (w *WindowBase) IsDialog() bool
func (*WindowBase) IsFocus ¶
func (w *WindowBase) IsFocus() bool
func (*WindowBase) IsFullscreen ¶
func (w *WindowBase) IsFullscreen() bool
func (*WindowBase) IsMinimized ¶
func (w *WindowBase) IsMinimized() bool
func (*WindowBase) IsModal ¶
func (w *WindowBase) IsModal() bool
func (*WindowBase) IsTool ¶
func (w *WindowBase) IsTool() bool
func (WindowBase) Name ¶
func (w WindowBase) Name() string
func (WindowBase) Parent ¶
func (w WindowBase) Parent() interface{}
func (*WindowBase) SetDestroyGPUResourcesFunc ¶ added in v1.3.0
func (w *WindowBase) SetDestroyGPUResourcesFunc(f func())
func (*WindowBase) SetName ¶
func (w *WindowBase) SetName(name string)
func (*WindowBase) SetParent ¶
func (w *WindowBase) SetParent(parent interface{})
func (WindowBase) Title ¶
func (w WindowBase) Title() string
type WindowFlags ¶
type WindowFlags int32
WindowFlags contains all the binary properties of a window -- by default with no other relevant flags a window is a main top-level window.
const ( // Dialog indicates that this is a temporary, pop-up window. Dialog WindowFlags = iota // Modal indicates that this dialog window blocks events going to other // windows until it is closed. Modal // Tool indicates that this is a floating tool window that has minimized // window decoration. Tool // Fullscreen indicates a window that occupies the entire screen. Fullscreen // Minimized indicates a window reduced to an icon, or otherwise no longer // visible or active. Otherwise, the window should be assumed to be // visible. Minimized // Focus indicates that the window has the focus. Focus WindowFlagsN )
func (*WindowFlags) FromString ¶
func (i *WindowFlags) FromString(s string) error
func (WindowFlags) String ¶
func (i WindowFlags) String() string
Source Files ¶
Directories ¶
Path | Synopsis |
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Package clip defines the system clipboard for the GoGi GUI system.
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Package clip defines the system clipboard for the GoGi GUI system. |
Package cursor defines the oswin cursor interface and standard system cursors that are supported across platforms
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Package cursor defines the oswin cursor interface and standard system cursors that are supported across platforms |
Package dnd defines the system drag-and-drop events for the GoGi GUI system.
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Package dnd defines the system drag-and-drop events for the GoGi GUI system. |
Package driver provides the default driver for accessing a screen.
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Package driver provides the default driver for accessing a screen. |
internal/_errapp
Package errapp provides a stub App implementation.
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Package errapp provides a stub App implementation. |
internal/_macdriver
Package macdriver provides an OpenGL-based driver for MacOS platform.
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Package macdriver provides an OpenGL-based driver for MacOS platform. |
internal/_x11driver
Package x11driver provides the X11 driver for oswin
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Package x11driver provides the X11 driver for oswin |
internal/event
Package event provides an infinitely buffered double-ended queue of events.
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Package event provides an infinitely buffered double-ended queue of events. |
Package key defines an event for physical keyboard keys, for the GoGi GUI system.
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Package key defines an event for physical keyboard keys, for the GoGi GUI system. |
Package mimedata defines MIME data support used in clipboard and drag-and-drop functions in the GoGi GUI.
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Package mimedata defines MIME data support used in clipboard and drag-and-drop functions in the GoGi GUI. |
Package mouse defines mouse events, for the GoGi GUI system.
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Package mouse defines mouse events, for the GoGi GUI system. |
Package osevent defines operating system level events, not associated with a particular window.
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Package osevent defines operating system level events, not associated with a particular window. |
Package touch defines an event for touch input, for the GoGi GUI system.
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Package touch defines an event for touch input, for the GoGi GUI system. |
Package window defines events associated with windows -- including changes in the dimensions, physical resolution and orientation of the app's window, and iconify, open and close events.
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Package window defines events associated with windows -- including changes in the dimensions, physical resolution and orientation of the app's window, and iconify, open and close events. |