Previously, the M and G00, G01, G02 and G03 commands were read, but nothing was actually done.
The current support is a bit rough, but it allows reading some drill files with routing commands.
A structured comment is a comment line starting by "G04 #@! " and in fact containing
a X2 attribute. It is used to create Gerber files contianing X2 metadata, but compatible
with X1 file format
- New GAL draw layers for GerbView
- Improved bounding boxes for Gerber shapes
- Switched to use of SHAPE_POLY_SET for polygons
- Add GAL methods to support selection and rendering
- Add GUI support of editing GAL options
- Rename get/setActiveLayer to Get/SetActiveLayer to match convention
Fix a very minor other issue (due to a minor bug in wx 3.1)
Displays the full graphic layer name of the selected item in message panel (instead of just the graphic layer number)
Pcbnew already uses this attribute when creating Gerber files.
Because Gerber files using this attribute identify the board layers stackup, Gerbview (if this attribute is defined) can sort gerber images stach up like the board.
(in layer manager, just right click to access to the sort menu)
! The initial testing of this commit should be done using a Debug build so that
all the wxASSERT()s are enabled. Also, be sure and keep enabled the
USE_KIWAY_DLLs option. The tree won't likely build without it. Turning it
off is senseless anyways. If you want stable code, go back to a prior version,
the one tagged with "stable".
* Relocate all functionality out of the wxApp derivative into more finely
targeted purposes:
a) DLL/DSO specific
b) PROJECT specific
c) EXE or process specific
d) configuration file specific data
e) configuration file manipulations functions.
All of this functionality was blended into an extremely large wxApp derivative
and that was incompatible with the desire to support multiple concurrently
loaded DLL/DSO's ("KIFACE")s and multiple concurrently open projects.
An amazing amount of organization come from simply sorting each bit of
functionality into the proper box.
* Switch to wxConfigBase from wxConfig everywhere except instantiation.
* Add classes KIWAY, KIFACE, KIFACE_I, SEARCH_STACK, PGM_BASE, PGM_KICAD,
PGM_SINGLE_TOP,
* Remove "Return" prefix on many function names.
* Remove obvious comments from CMakeLists.txt files, and from else() and endif()s.
* Fix building boost for use in a DSO on linux.
* Remove some of the assumptions in the CMakeLists.txt files that windows had
to be the host platform when building windows binaries.
* Reduce the number of wxStrings being constructed at program load time via
static construction.
* Pass wxConfigBase* to all SaveSettings() and LoadSettings() functions so that
these functions are useful even when the wxConfigBase comes from another
source, as is the case in the KICAD_MANAGER_FRAME.
* Move the setting of the KIPRJMOD environment variable into class PROJECT,
so that it can be moved into a project variable soon, and out of FP_LIB_TABLE.
* Add the KIWAY_PLAYER which is associated with a particular PROJECT, and all
its child wxFrames and wxDialogs now have a Kiway() member function which
returns a KIWAY& that that window tree branch is in support of. This is like
wxWindows DNA in that child windows get this member with proper value at time
of construction.
* Anticipate some of the needs for milestones B) and C) and make code
adjustments now in an effort to reduce work in those milestones.
* No testing has been done for python scripting, since milestone C) has that
being largely reworked and re-thought-out.
The plan goes like this:
- eeschema still uses int in decidegrees
- all the other things internally use double in decidegrees (or radians
in temporaries)
- in pcbnew UI the unit is *still* int in decidegrees
The idea is to have better precision everywhere while keeping the user with int i
angles. Hopefully, if a fractional angle doesn't come in from the outside, everything
should *look* like an integer angle (unless I forgot something and it broke)
When the time comes, simply updating the UI for allowing doubles from the user should
be enough to get arbitrary angles in pcbnew.
- Removed spurious int casts (these are truncated anyway and will break
doubles)
- Applied the Distance, GetLineLength, EuclideanNorm, DEG2RAD, RAD2DEG
ArcTangente and NORMALIZE* functions where possible
- ArcTangente now returns double and handles the 0,0 case like atan2, so
it's no longer necessary to check for it before calling
- Small functions in trigo moved as inline
Should allow Pcbnew code easier to change and Gerbview code more understandable and easier to maintain.
Code cleaning (remove dead code, add comments).
Minor other enhancements.
// This provides better project control over rounding to int from double
// than wxRound() did. This scheme provides better logging in Debug builds
// and it provides for compile time calculation of constants.
#include <stdio.h>
#include <assert.h>
#include <limits.h>
//-----<KiROUND KIT>------------------------------------------------------------
/**
* KiROUND
* rounds a floating point number to an int using
* "round halfway cases away from zero".
* In Debug build an assert fires if will not fit into an int.
*/
#if defined( DEBUG )
// DEBUG: a macro to capture line and file, then calls this inline
static inline int KiRound( double v, int line, const char* filename )
{
v = v < 0 ? v - 0.5 : v + 0.5;
if( v > INT_MAX + 0.5 )
{
printf( "%s: in file %s on line %d, val: %.16g too ' > 0 ' for int\n", __FUNCTION__, filename, line, v );
}
else if( v < INT_MIN - 0.5 )
{
printf( "%s: in file %s on line %d, val: %.16g too ' < 0 ' for int\n", __FUNCTION__, filename, line, v );
}
return int( v );
}
#define KiROUND( v ) KiRound( v, __LINE__, __FILE__ )
#else
// RELEASE: a macro so compile can pre-compute constants.
#define KiROUND( v ) int( (v) < 0 ? (v) - 0.5 : (v) + 0.5 )
#endif
//-----</KiROUND KIT>-----------------------------------------------------------
// Only a macro is compile time calculated, an inline function causes a static constructor
// in a situation like this.
// Therefore the Release build is best done with a MACRO not an inline function.
int Computed = KiROUND( 14.3 * 8 );
int main( int argc, char** argv )
{
for( double d = double(INT_MAX)-1; d < double(INT_MAX)+8; d += 2.0 )
{
int i = KiROUND( d );
printf( "t: %d %.16g\n", i, d );
}
return 0;
}
* Correct all user strings and comments for the correct capitalization of
application names according to JP. They are KiCad, Pcbnew, CvPcb,
Eeschema, and GerbView.
* Add a note the the user interface policy about the correct capitalization.