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Author SHA1 Message Date
b00cf460bb Mature ltk to host an externally-laid-out Android view tree
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Add the primitives rustdroid needs to project an Android view hierarchy onto an ltk surface, all kept general rather than Android-specific.
Canvas gains arbitrary vector path fill and stroke: `Canvas::fill_path` / `stroke_path` over a new `PathCmd` command list (MoveTo/LineTo/QuadTo/CubicTo/Close in surface coordinates). The software backend rasterises directly with tiny-skia; the GLES backend rasterises into a tiny-skia pixmap and blits it (CPU fallback, no GPU path shader). This is what renders an Android `Path`, a `VectorDrawable`, or a Lottie frame.
`ExternalSource::Cpu` (and the `External::cpu` constructor) adds an immediate-mode CPU drawing closure, invoked once per frame with the canvas and the widget's laid-out rect, working on both the GLES and software backends. It hosts a custom `View.onDraw` straight onto the ltk canvas without a GL texture round-trip, unlike the existing `Texture` source which only renders on GLES.
`Stack::push_placed` appends a child at an exact rect, bypassing alignment and intrinsic sizing. This lets a view tree whose geometry is computed elsewhere — Android's measure/layout pass, which yields an absolute rect per view — be projected onto a Stack in paint order.
New `RichText` widget: wrapped paragraph text carrying a message per clickable link range, with the layout pass emitting one hit rect per link line so taps land on the link rather than the whole paragraph. It is the ltk side of an Android `Spanned` carrying `URLSpan` / `ClickableSpan`.
gesture: only drive the horizontal pager once the axis locks horizontal
`on_move` emitted horizontal swipe progress whenever `swipe_axis != Vertical`, which includes the pre-lock window where `swipe_axis` is still `None` (the first ~8 px of travel). But `horizontal_drag_started` only flips once `dx.abs() > 8`. A vertical gesture that opened with a few pixels of lateral drift — a swipe-up to the launcher, a scroll — therefore emitted a tiny horizontal progress sample, which armed the consumer's pager, then locked vertical without `dx` ever passing 8, so `horizontal_drag_started` stayed false. On release the horizontal branch was skipped, no `on_swipe_horizontal_progress(0.0)` fired, and the pager stayed stuck active — on the crustace homescreen that froze the surface (the main stays motion-only behind stale page subsurfaces) until an unrelated gesture reset it.
Emit horizontal progress only once `swipe_axis == Some(Horizontal)`. Locking onto the horizontal axis already implies `dx.abs() > 8`, so `horizontal_drag_started` is set in the same step, restoring the invariant that a frame which drives the pager always has a matching release event to settle it. The cost is that the first ~8 px of a horizontal drag no longer move the page, which is the same deadband the axis lock already imposes on the vertical panels. Adds `pre_lock_lateral_drift_does_not_drive_horizontal_pager`.
2026-06-12 22:14:02 +02:00
9ca3b60f3a ltk: responsive padding/spacing and scrolling, expanded theme palette, and bundled Adwaita cursors
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A mixed pass over the default theme and the layout/input core, plus the toolkit's own cursor set. Grouped by area below.
== Responsive sizing ==
Add `Length::dp( px )` — a "design pixel". It interprets `px` against a configurable reference vmin (default 412 px, the eydos mobile reference width) and returns `Vmin( px / reference * 100 ).clamp( px * 0.7, px * 1.5 )`, so a value authored against a mock-up scales with the surface without collapsing on tiny screens or ballooning on a 4K desktop. The reference is process-global, set via `set_design_reference()` and read via `design_reference()` (stored as f32 bits in an AtomicU32); both are re-exported from `lib.rs`.
Make container and grid insets relative. `Container`'s four padding fields become `Length` instead of `f32`; every setter (`padding`, `padding_h`, `padding_v`, `padding_top`/`right`/`bottom`/`left`) now takes `impl Into<Length>`, so existing `f32` call sites keep compiling via the `From<f32>` shim. The values are resolved against the viewport in `Container::preferred_size` and in the container draw path (`draw/layout.rs`). `WrapGrid`'s `spacing_x`, `spacing_y` and `padding` get the same treatment, with a `resolved( canvas )` helper funnelling the per-frame resolution and `grid()` seeding `Length::px` defaults. Container tests now compare against `Length::px( … )`.
== Scrolling ==
`Scroll::preferred_size` is now axis-aware. A horizontal-only scroll reports its child's natural height rather than claiming all remaining vertical space, so it no longer steals Y from its siblings when it sits inside a `Column`; vertical and both-axis scrolls keep the spacer-like `( max_width, 0.0 )`. `Column`'s space-distribution correspondingly treats a `Scroll` as a vertical space-claimer only when its axis allows Y.
Disambiguate nested scroll viewports by direction. On press the gesture state now collects every scroll viewport under the point (`scroll_candidates`, innermost first) instead of committing to one; on the first 8 px of motion it locks onto the candidate whose axis matches the dominant direction (`scroll_locked`), so a horizontal scroller nested inside a vertical list no longer grabs the wrong axis. The pointer scroll hit test is aligned to the same innermost-first ordering.
== Theme palette ==
`themes/default/theme.json` gains named colours (green / green-deep, yellow, orange / orange-deep, pink / pink-soft, sky-deep, error / error-soft, neutral-tertiary) and new semantic slots in both light and dark modes: `danger`, `text-tertiary`, `accept`, `chip` / `chip-active` / `chip-active-fg`, and `avatar-1` … `avatar-9`.
== Cursors ==
Bundle GNOME's Adwaita cursor theme — the cursors GNOME Shell uses — into `themes/default/cursors/` so a Wayland compositor can draw consistent, complete pointers for ltk applications without the toolkit rasterising cursors itself and without depending on adwaita-icon-theme being installed on the target. The cursors are copied verbatim in XCursor binary format: 35 image files, one per CSS/freedesktop cursor name (default, text, pointer, *-resize, …), plus 27 customary X11 alias symlinks (arrow → default, hand2 → pointer, …); a sibling `cursor.theme` makes the tree a valid XCursor theme. The existing `ltk-theme-default.install` copies `themes/default` recursively, so the directory ships with no packaging change. Applications keep declaring a `CursorShape` per widget over `wp_cursor_shape_v1`; the compositor resolves it against the active theme's `cursors/` directory by name, and the set covers all 34 `CursorShape` variants.
Document the set in `themes/default/cursors/README.md` (what it is, the XCursor layout, the full shape list, how the compositor consumes it, guidance for forks) and `themes/default/cursors/LICENSE.md` (attribution and licence options, modelled on the icons catalogue LICENSE). `lib.rs` lists the cursors in its third-party-assets section.
Close out licensing in `debian/copyright`: a `Files: themes/default/cursors/*` paragraph records the upstream dual offer (CC-BY-SA-3.0 or LGPL-3, and CC-BY-SA-4.0 for the newer assets) attributed to the GNOME Project, with standalone CC-BY-SA-3.0, CC-BY-SA-4.0 and LGPL-3 paragraphs (summary-plus-canonical-URL for the CC licences, matching the existing CC-BY-4.0 entry; LGPL-3 referencing /usr/share/common-licenses/LGPL-3). The files are unmodified from upstream, so there is nothing to declare under the ShareAlike "indicate if changes were made" clause.
Add `tests/cursor_assets.rs`: every `CursorShape` name resolves to a valid XCursor file (Xcur magic, following symlinks), `cursor.theme` is present, no entry is a dangling symlink, and the expected-name list stays in sync with the enum's 34 variants.
2026-05-28 23:11:14 +02:00
24f4d2703a ltk: introduce viewport-relative Length so any size, padding, spacing or font height can scale with the surface instead of being frozen at a px constant, fix text::preferred_size to honour the font-declared line gap, and add a responsive typographic scale
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The motivating bug was a lockscreen in a downstream app (eydos-loginmanager) where the clock at 87 px overlapped the date at 24 px on a Pinephone but not on a winit dev screen. The root cause split in two: the layout was wired with a single `f32` spacing constant that worked at the dev resolution and broke at the smaller one, and `text::Text::preferred_size` was returning `ascent - descent` for the line height — fontdue's terminology for "the minimum bounding box of an unaccented line", which deliberately drops the `line_gap` that every typographic renderer (Pango, CoreText, DirectWrite) reserves between adjacent rows. At Sora's 200/em line gap, an 87 px row was visually 17 px taller than the rect the column allocated for it; stacked tight against the row above, the descenders bled into the row below. This commit fixes both halves at the toolkit level so every consumer benefits without bolting on a per-screen `Sizing` helper in their own view code.
`types::Length` (with the `LengthBase` enum behind it) is the new currency for any "how big" or "how far apart" parameter. Six variants — `Px`, `Vw`, `Vh`, `Vmin`, `Vmax`, `Em` — cover the cases a real UI hits: absolute pixels for fixed-chrome decisions, viewport-relative percentages for sizes that have to survive a portrait/landscape rotation, and root-font-size multiples for typographic hierarchy. Optional `min_px` / `max_px` bounds attach to the same `Length` value via `.clamp( lo, hi )` (both ends), `.at_least( lo )` and `.at_most( hi )` (one-sided); the names are intentionally divergent from `f32::min`/`f32::max` to avoid being read with the opposite semantics (`x.min(24)` in std means "the smaller of x and 24", which is the inverse of what a min bound expresses). The bounds are stored as raw `f32` rather than nested `Length` values, which keeps `Length` `Copy` and avoids a `Box` allocation per widget per frame — the bounded-by-relative case (`Vmin(20).clamp(Vmin(10), Vmin(40))`) is rare enough that the trade is the right one. `From<f32>`, `From<i32>` and `From<u32>` are implemented so every legacy `.size( 24.0 )` / `.padding( 8.0 )` / `.spacing( 4.0 )` call keeps compiling unchanged; the migration is opt-in per call site. The `EM_BASE_DEFAULT = 16.0` constant matches `theme::typography::BODY` so `Length::em( 2.0 )` resolves consistently with the body-text default; a future change can thread a theme-supplied em base through without breaking the resolver shape.
The resolver — `Length::resolve( viewport: ( f32, f32 ), em_base: f32 ) -> f32` — runs at layout time against a viewport supplied by the renderer. `Canvas::viewport_logical()` is the new helper that exposes that viewport: it divides the canvas's physical size by `dpi_scale` and falls back to physical size when `dpi_scale <= 0.0`, guarding the misconfigured-canvas path so a Vmin call doesn't poison every downstream measurement with `NaN` or `inf`. The viewport is in **logical** pixels — matching what every wayland `xdg_toplevel.configure` event already hands the client — so `Length::vmin( 18.0 )` on a 360×720-logical Librem 5 portrait surface resolves to 64.8 px and the same expression on a 1600×900 dev screen resolves to 162 px, automatically.
Every widget setter that took an `f32` size, padding, spacing, max-width, or fixed dimension now takes `impl Into<Length>` and stores the value as `Length`:
- `widget::text::Text::size( impl Into<Length> )`; the `size` field is now `Length`. `Text::resolved_size( &Canvas )` is the internal accessor that every measurement / drawing path routes through, so the field can stay `Length` without churning the call sites. `preferred_size` and `draw` now read `new_line_size = ascent - descent + line_gap` from fontdue's `LineMetrics` (the fix for the original bug) — the baseline placement is unchanged, only the row height grows by the font's declared leading, which is what every stacked layout was implicitly relying on.
- `layout::Spacer::height( impl Into<Length> )` / `.width( impl Into<Length> )`; `fixed_height` / `fixed_width` are now `Option<Length>`. New `resolved_height( &Canvas )` / `resolved_width( &Canvas )` helpers replace the direct `s.fixed_height.unwrap_or( 0.0 )` reads in `layout::column`, `layout::row` and `layout::stack`. `Spacer::preferred_size` grows a `&Canvas` parameter for the same reason; `Element::preferred_size` passes the canvas through.
- `layout::Column::spacing` / `.padding` / `.max_width`, `layout::Row::spacing` / `.padding` — all take `impl Into<Length>` and store `Length`. Internal `resolved_spacing( &Canvas )`, `resolved_padding( &Canvas )`, `resolved_max_width( &Canvas )` helpers funnel every read, so the layout code paths stay readable. The column's `inner_w` private helper picks up a `&Canvas` argument; the test that used it directly is updated.
`theme::typography` keeps its historic `f32` constants (`H0`…`BODY_XS`, plus `LINE_HEIGHT`) so the migration is gradual, and adds a parallel responsive scale exposed as functions returning `Length`: `h0()`, `h1()`, `h2()`, `h3()`, `body()`, `body_s()`, `body_xs()`. Each is a `Length::vmin( pct ).clamp( min_px, max_px )` whose percentage is calibrated against a 1000-px smaller side reproducing the legacy px constant exactly, and whose px clamps protect both ends of the spectrum — a 360-px Pinephone hits the lower clamp on the larger headings, a 4K desktop hits the upper one. The tests in `theme::typography` exercise all three regimes (narrow phone, calibration point, large display) so future drift in the percentages or clamps is caught immediately.
`Canvas::viewport_logical` is the only render-surface API touched. None of the existing per-frame paths (`draw_text`, `measure_text`, `font_line_metrics`) change shape, so backends and external embedders aren't disturbed. The `dpi_scale` accessor already existed; this commit only adds the convenience that ratios it against the surface size to return the unit layout actually wants.
Test coverage rounds out the addition rather than just smoke-testing the happy path: 22 new tests, broken down as `types::length_tests` (7 — every variant, clamp with relative value, clamp with swapped bounds, `From<f32>`), `render::viewport_tests` (3 — scale 1, scale 2, scale 0 fallback), `theme::typography::tests` (3 — phone-clamped, calibrated, 4K-clamped), `layout::spacer::tests` (4 — px height, vmin height, vw width, flex spacer reports `None`), `layout::column::tests` (3 new — vmin spacing accumulates, vmin padding, vmin max-width caps inner-w), `layout::row::tests` (2 new — vmin padding, vmin spacing produces correct visible gap between non-flex children regardless of the row's centering anchor), and `widget::text::tests` (3 updated/new — defaults compare against `Length::px(16.0)`, `.size( f32 )` and `.size( Length )` both verified). The existing integration test in `tests/layout_stack_spacer.rs` is updated to call `Spacer::preferred_size( &canvas )` and compare `fixed_height` / `fixed_width` against `Some( Length::px( n ) )`.
Documentation is updated end-to-end so the new API is discoverable from `cargo doc` without grepping the source: `lib.rs` gets a new entry for `Length` under the **Types** section and a new **Designing for multiple resolutions** section that lists the three patterns (relative `Length` for sizing, responsive typography for hierarchy, `view()`-level branching on surface dimensions only when the structure itself must change). `Canvas::viewport_logical` ships with a runnable `assert_eq!` example covering the scale-2 case. The module-level docstrings for `Spacer`, `Column` and `Row` now show both an `f32` example (legacy, still valid) and a `Length::vmin( ... ).clamp( ... )` example for the responsive variant — `cargo doc` renders both side by side so the upgrade path is obvious.
Out of scope for this commit, deliberate: `WrapGrid::spacing_x` / `spacing_y` / `padding`, `widget::text_edit::TextEdit::font_size`, and `widget::image::Image::size` still take `f32`. None of them are on a critical responsive path right now, the `From<f32>` shim means migrating later is a one-line setter signature change per widget, and keeping this commit focused on the widgets the lockscreen actually uses keeps the diff reviewable. The line-gap fix in `text::preferred_size` already benefits `TextEdit` indirectly because its caret/row math reads from the same metrics helpers.
2026-05-24 00:12:50 +02:00
bbab5e238d First commit. Version 0.1.0 2026-05-10 09:58:23 +02:00