1) Don't fracture font glyphs when generating them; we're going
to fracture during triangulation anyway.
2) Don't check for self-intersection when deciding to fracture.
It costs nearly as much as the fracture does.
3) Cache drawing sheet text.
4) Use the current font when checking for cache validity.
5) Parallelize glyph triangulation.
6) Don't invalidate bounding box caches when offset by {0,0}
7) Use the glyph cache when generating text effective shape.
8) Short-circuit NormalizeJustification() if its center/center.
9) Don't triangulate for GuessSelectionCandidates()
10) Avoid sqrt whenever possible.
11) Pre-allocate bezier and SHAPE_LINE_CHAIN buffers.
Fixes https://gitlab.com/kicad/code/kicad/-/issues/14303
Currently this lives behind the advanced config flag `UseClipper2`.
Enabling this flag will route all Clipper-based calls through the
Clipper2 library instead of the older Clipper. The changes should be
mostly transparent.
Of note, Clipper2 does not utilize the `STRICTLY_SIMPLE` flag because
clipper1 did not actually guarantee a strictly simple polygon.
Currently we ignore this flag but we may decide to run strictly-simple
operations through a second NULL union to simplify the results as much
as possible.
Additionally, the inflation options are slightly different. We cannot
choose the fallback miter. The fallback miter is always square. This
only affects the CHAMFER_ACUTE_CORNERS option in inflate, which does not
appear to be used.
Lastly, we currently utilize the 64-bit integer coordinates for
calculations. This appears to still be faster than 32-bit calculations
in Clipper1 on a modern x86 system. This may not be the case for older
systems, particularly 32-bit systems.
1) Move a bunch of std::map's to std::unordered_map to get constant-time
look-ups
2) Lengthen progress-reporting intervals to spend more time doing work
and less time talking about it
3) Reverse order of SHAPE_LINE_CHAINs in thermal intersection checks to
make (much) better use of bbox caches
4) Don't re-generate bboxes we already have
5) Fix some autos that weren't by reference (and were therefore copying
large datasets)
6) Rename delta progressDelta so it's easier to search for in future
7) Get rid of a few more autos (because I don't like them)
8) Pass large items to lambdas by reference
Fixes https://gitlab.com/kicad/code/kicad/issues/12130
Clipper might mess up the rotation of the indices such that an arc can be split between
the end point and wrap around to the start point. Detect if this happened and fix it as
required.
Also, handle arcs at the last segment of the chain correctly, meaning we can have arcs
towards the end of the chain that finish at the starting point of the chain.
Fixes https://gitlab.com/kicad/code/kicad/-/issues/9670
This ensures that the arc shapes remain correct after removing
a point belonging to an arc or inserting a point in the middle
of an arc.
Simplify implementation of Replace( ..., aP ). Now a Remove
operation followed by an Insert operation.
Improve QA test for SHAPE_LINE_CHAIN Append, Insert and Replace
Implement SHAPE_LINE_CHAIN::splitArc to break up an arc into two
Implement SHAPE_ARC::ConstructFromStartEndCenter and add qa test
m_shapes now has two possible indices. The first one is populated if
the point is associated with an arc and the second index is populated
if the point is shared between two arcs.
Creates new substructure for arc management. Existing functions provide
wrapper to use SHAPE_LINE_CHAIN as normal, without arcs while also
permitting the addition of arcs into the chain
The new line collision search uses BBox() to check for colliding
objects. BBox in the SHAPE_LINE_CHAIN did not include width as the
chains were assumed to be zero-width. This is not the case for
PNS::LINE elements.
We mostly don't notice this because DRC checks for SEGMENT collisions
but it becomes obvious/annoying when we cannot place a track for unknown
reasons and the snap-back doesn't take line width into account.
Fixes#3776 | https://gitlab.com/kicad/code/kicad/issues/3776