kwin/effects/howto.cpp
Luboš Luňák 4019dff500 Distinguish between damage and repaints - damage is when windows contents
change, repaint just triggers repaint of the area (without e.g. the texture
updating for OpenGL).
addDamage() -> addRepaint()
CCMAIL: kwin@kde.org


svn path=/branches/work/kwin_composite/; revision=632866
2007-02-12 15:22:43 +00:00

151 lines
6.3 KiB
C++

/*****************************************************************
KWin - the KDE window manager
This file is part of the KDE project.
Copyright (C) 2006 Lubos Lunak <l.lunak@kde.org>
You can Freely distribute this program under the GNU General Public
License. See the file "COPYING" for the exact licensing terms.
******************************************************************/
/*
Files howto.cpp and howto.h implement HowtoEffect, a commented demo compositing
effect that fades out and again in a window after it has been activated.
Please see file howto.h first.
*/
// Include the class definition.
#include "howto.h"
#include "deleted.h"
// Note that currently effects need to be manually enabled in the EffectsHandler
// class constructor (in effects.cpp).
namespace KWinInternal
{
// A pre-paint function that tells the compositing code how this effect will affect
// the painting. During every painting pass this function is called first, before
// the actual painting function.
// Arguments:
// w - the window that will be painted
// mask - a mask of flags controlling the painting, setting or resetting flags changes
// how the painting will be done
// region - the region of the screen that needs to be painted, support for modifying it
// is not fully implemented yet, do not use
// time - time in milliseconds since the last paint, useful for animations
void HowtoEffect::prePaintWindow( EffectWindow* w, int* mask, QRegion* region, int time )
{
// Is this window the one that is going to be faded out and in again?
if( w == fade_window )
{
// Simply add the time to the total progress. The value of progress will be used
// to determine how far in effect is.
progress += time;
// If progress is < 1000 (milliseconds), the effect is still in progress.
if( progress < 1000 ) // complete change in 1000ms
{
// Since the effect will make the window translucent, explicitly change
// the flags so that the window will be painted only as translucent.
*mask |= Scene::PAINT_WINDOW_TRANSLUCENT;
*mask &= ~Scene::PAINT_WINDOW_OPAQUE;
}
else
{
// If progress has reached 1000 (milliseconds), it means the effect is done
// and there is no window to fade anymore.
fade_window = NULL;
}
}
// Call the next effect (or the actual window painting code if this is the last effect).
// Effects are chained and they all modify something if needed and then call the next one.
effects->prePaintWindow( w, mask, region, time );
}
// The function that handles the actual painting. Some simple modifications are possible
// by only changing the painting data. More complicated effects would do some painting
// or transformations directly.
// Arguments:
// w - the window that will be painted
// mask - a mask of flags controlling the painting
// region - the region of the screen that needs to be painted, if mask includes the TRANSFORMED
// then special care needs to be taken, because the region may be infiniteRegion(), meaning
// everything needs to be painted
// data - painting data that can be modified to do some simple transformations
void HowtoEffect::paintWindow( EffectWindow* w, int mask, QRegion region, WindowPaintData& data )
{
// Is this the window to be faded out and in again?
if( w == fade_window )
{
// This effect, after a window has been activated, fades it out to only 50% transparency
// and then fades it in again to be fully opaque (assuming it's otherwise a fully opaque
// window, otherwise the transparencies will be added).
if( progress <= 500 )
{
// For the first 500 milliseconds (progress being 0 to 500), the window is faded out.
// progress == 0 -> opacity *= 1
// progress == 500 -> opacity *= 0.5
// Note that the division is floating-point division to avoid integer rounding down.
// Note that data.opacity is not set but multiplied - this allows chaining of effects,
// for example if another effect always changes opacity of some window types.
data.opacity *= 1 - 0.5 * ( progress / 500.0 );
}
else
{
// For the second 500 milliseconds (progress being 500 to 1000), the window is
// faded in again.
// progress == 500 -> opacity *= 0.5
// progress == 1000 -> opacity *= 1
data.opacity *= 0.5 + 0.5 * ( progress - 500 ) / 500.0;
}
}
// Call the next effect.
effects->paintWindow( w, mask, region, data );
}
// The function that is called after the painting pass is finished. When an animation is going on,
// it can add repaints of some areas so that the next painting pass has to repaint them again.
void HowtoEffect::postPaintWindow( EffectWindow* w )
{
// Is this the window to be faded out and in again?
if( w == fade_window )
{
// Trigger repaint of the whole window, this will cause it to be repainted the next painting pass.
// Currently the API for effects is not complete, so for now window() is used to access
// internal class Toplevel. This should change in the future.
w->window()->addRepaintFull(); // trigger next animation repaint
}
// Call the next effect.
effects->postPaintWindow( w );
}
// This function is called when a new window becomes active.
void HowtoEffect::windowActivated( EffectWindow* c )
{
// Set the window to be faded (or NULL if no window is active).
fade_window = c;
if( fade_window != NULL )
{
// If there is a window to be faded, reset the progress to zero.
progress = 0;
// And add repaint to the window so that it needs to be repainted.
c->window()->addRepaintFull();
}
}
// This function is called when a window is closed.
void HowtoEffect::windowClosed( EffectWindow* c )
{
// If the window to be faded out and in is closed, just reset the pointer.
// This effect then will do nothing and just call the next effect.
if( fade_window == c )
fade_window = NULL;
}
// That's all. Don't forget to enable the effect as described at the beginning of this file.
} // namespace