In polygon calculations (combining polygons, fracture) the mode of calculation (fast or strictly simple polygon option) as no more a default value, because choosing the best mode is better to optimize the calculation time.
Fix ( workaround only) crash (Windows only) when a quasi modal frame (like footprint viewer) was called from a dialog (like the component properties dialog in schematic editor).
Very minor other fixes.
SVG plot, fix a missing reinitialization in plot lines, which could define a filled polyline, instead of a simple polyline
(these fixes solve Bug #1313084 )
Pcbnew:, libedit, Save lib as...: the new .pretty lib format is the default, instead of legacy .mod format. The legacy format is still selectable in the file selection dialog.
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.
In particular the new mechanism for handling extended color palettes is in place,
included renaming the ini keys and saving the color name instead of its index; this means better forward compatibility with palette changes.
Since ini keys are changed, colors will be reset
// 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.
Pcbnew: Fixed an issue in GERBER file creation, under Vista and W7 only for non administrator users
Plot files were 0 byte length.
This was due to use of function tmpfile() in a GERBER function to create a temporary file that seems not working using mingw.
Replaced by more usual files functions.