… 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.
They are now replaced by the more generic gimp_palette_[gs]et_colormap(),
hence making less of a particular concept of "image colormap". It's just
a palette attached to the image (and restricted to the image format).
As discussed in !1725, there is an init order issue, which is that you
cannot obtain any of these ID objects as long as the GimpProcedure is
not created. In particular, now that GimpResource arguments can have
defaults, we will want to query such resource in the create_procedure()
implementation of a plug-in (where the GimpProcedure is not running yet,
as we are defining it!).
Anyway I don't really see the point of these multiple-level hash tables
all storing a reference to the same object. Let's just store in the
GimpPlugIn's hash tables once and give the same reference to any
procedure (anyway we make it clear that these objects belong to libgimp
and must not be freed, so it's a bug all the same if someone frees
them). Then it also fixes the init order issue.
This commit renames the GimpVectors
object to GimpPath in both app/core and
in libgimp. It also renames the files
to gimppath.[ch] and updates the relevant
build and translation files.
There are still outstanding gimp_vectors_* ()
functions on the app side that need to be renamed
in a subsequent commit.
...to paths
The first step in converting GimpVectors
to GimpPath. The PDB API for any
gimp_image_*_vectors () is now
gimp_image_*_paths ().
This commit only covers libgimp, and
the app/core versions will be renamed in
a following commit.
In most bindings, they would just result in the same signature as the
_get_ variants (which people have been used to, since the GIMP 2
series). Also I was told that apparently in some bindings where this
would make a different signature, the (skip) annotation could be ignored
anyway.
GLib has a specific type for byte arrays: `GBytes` (and it's underlying
GType `G_TYPE_BYTES`).
By using this type, we can avoid having a `GimpUint8Array` which is a
bit cumbersome to use for both the C API, as well as bindings. By using
`GBytes`, we allow other languages to pass on byte arrays as they are
used to, while the bindings will make sure to do the right thing.
In the end, it makes the API a little bit simpler for everyone, and
reduces confusion for people who are used to working with byte arrays
in other C/GLib based code (and not having 2 different types to denote
the same thing).
Related: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gimp/-/issues/5919
Missing functions were:
* gimp_image_get_selected_channels()
* gimp_image_get_selected_vectors()
* gimp_image_list_selected_channels()
* gimp_image_list_selected_vectors()
* gimp_image_set_selected_channels()
* gimp_image_set_selected_vectors()
* gimp_image_take_selected_channels()
* gimp_image_take_selected_vectors()
There are discussions of renaming GimpVectors to GimpPath, which would
also be consistent with the GUI and make the always-plural less akward
in API. We'll see. For now keeping named like this.
… the public API.
This was initially proposed by Niels De Graef in !101, and though I
still think this is much less practical for day-to-day development, it
is actually much nicer for the public part of the API. So let's use
these only in public libgimp* API only, not in core.
I actually already started to use these for some of the libgimpwidgets
classes and am now moving libgimp main classes to these macros.
* It doesn't expose the priv member (which is completely useless for
plug-in developers, only to be used for core development).
* It forces us to never have any variable members in the public API
(which we were doing fine so far in newest API, but it's nice to be
enforced with these macros).
* When using G_DECLARE_FINAL_TYPE in particular, it adds flexibility as
we can change the structure size and the members order as these are
not exposed. And if some day, we make the class derivable with some
signals to handle, only then will we expose the class with some
_gimp_reserved* padding (instead of from the start when none is
needed). Therefore we will allow for further extension far in the
future.
Moreover most of these libgimp classes were so far not using any private
values, so we were declaring a `priv` member with a bogus contents just
"in case we needed it in future" (as we couldn't change the struct
size). So even the easiness of having a priv member was very relative
for this public API so far (unlike in core code where we actually have
much more complex interactions and using priv data all the time).
Similar to gimp_image_set_selected_layers() except that it takes a GList
(instead of a C array) and also it takes ownership of the list pointer.
This makes it much easier to use in some specific situations.
Especially need to watch out with forgetting `(array)` and `(out)`
annotations, as they can really give a different API in certain (if not
most) bindings.
Even when the function names may have stayed the same in most cases, the
API has changed. The "Since:" tag must therefore be bumped.
Also adding docs for gimp_drawable_get_sub_thumbnail_data() which had
none.
- hand out and leak proxy object objects to legacy API like candy,
bypassing the factory in GimpPlugIn, because there is no plug-in
singleton.
- gimpgpcompat.c: image, item etc. are now objects, simply forgot this
file.
Turn all ID param specs into object param specs (e.g. GimpParamImageID
becomes GimpParamImage) and convert between IDs and objects in
gimpgpparams.c directly above the the wire protocol, so all of app/,
libgimp/ and plug-ins/ can deal directly with objects down to the
lowest level and not care about IDs.
Use the actual object param specs for procedure arguments and return
values again instead of a plain g_param_spec_object() and bring back
the none_ok parameter.
This implies changing the PDB type checking functions to work on pure
integers instead of IDs (one can't check whether object creation is
possible if performing that check requires the object to already
exist).
For example gimp_foo_is_valid() becomes gimp_foo_id_is_valid() and is
not involved in automatic object creation magic at the protocol
level. Added wrappers which still say gimp_foo_is_valid() and take the
respective objects.
Adapted all code, and it all becomes nicer and less convoluted, even
the generated PDB wrappers in app/ and libgimp/.
We now have both variants, one returning a GList, and another
returning an array. Turns out that while a list is often nicer,
sometimes a random-access array really keeps the code much simpler.
Adapt all plug-ins, and clean up a bit (like use g_list_reverse() once
instead of iterating the list reversed).
Turn GimpPlugIn into the main factory for all proxies and keep the
main hash tables there. The hash tables keep the initial reference.
For each GimpProcedure::run(), have s "sub-factory" which hands out
proxies to the actual procedure code. Each run() has hash tables of
its own which hold additional references. When run() is done, get rid
of its hash tables and their references, *and* drop the main plug-in
reference counts from the global hashes if the proxies' refcount has
dropped to one.
This means that images' ownership is not given to caller in particular.
libgimp will now keep a reference of all GimpImage-s it creates and
return this same reference if called again. It also means that you can
now compare images by pointer comparison (as 2 GimpImage objects
representing the same image ID will be equal).
Obviously as a side effect, gimp_image_list() is changed to (transfer
container) as you must only free the container now, not the elements.
Also various other functions creating new images are now (transfer none)
too.
Long-time plug-ins will have to be taken in consideration in a further
step (we currently never free GimpImage for destroyed images in
particular).
I.e.: gimp_image_get_(layers|channels|vectors)(), gimp_image_list() and
gimp_item_get_children().
Instead of returning an array of IDs, these will now return a GList with
the right objects ready to use.
Same as previous commit: by default the new API will be used. But if a
plug-in builds with GIMP_DEPRECATED_REPLACE_NEW_API macro, then the same
function names will call the old API with ids.
This means that all functions which were returning or taking as
parameter an image id (as gint32) are now taking a GimpImage object
instead.
The PDB is still passing around an id only over the wire. But we create
an object for plug-ins to work on.
This is quite a huge API break, but is probably the best bet for the
future quality. It will make nicer API instrospection (and nicer API in
binding), will fix the issues with pspec on GimpImageID in Python
bindings (which makes the current Python API unusable as soon as we need
to work on images, which is most of our plug-ins!), etc.
Also it will allow to use signals on images, which will be a great asset
when we will finally have bi-directionnal communications (i.e. plug-ins
would be able to connect to image changes, destructions, and whatnot).
Basically this commit makes sure that all return values that are marked
as "Returns:" also have a `(nullable)` annotation if it is mentioned on
the same line that NULL can also be returned.
This will prevent a few problems in GObject-introspection.
because it confuses gtk-doc and breaks some links. Also change the
"Index of new symbols in GIMP 2.x" sections to be what seems to be the
modern standard (looked at the GLib and GTK+ docs), and update some
other stuff.