dependent on the complexity of the geometry. For complex scenes this
meant that it looked like you were "throwing" the display into molasses.
For simple geometry things get over-excited once thrown.
The fix is to factor in the frame rendering time to the caluclated
motion. I've implemented this for rotation and panning.
Now when things are thrown they maintain a rate very close to what was
happening when the mouse button was released."
This makes it possible to redefine the viewing direction of 'home' in the other manipulator - so home in a GIS app could be a plan view.
Since _homeUp is set to (0,0,1) and no current code changes it there shouldn't be any difference for current users."
TrackballManipulator. The purpose of this is to disable throwing when
you release the mouse button while moving the mouse. The default
settings is true (ie, allow throw). The two source files are attached.
"
A Collada camera will be added to the scenegraph as osg::CameraView. This allows the user to create a set of predefined camera viewpoints. I also added a new MatrixManipulator to osgGA called CameraViewSwitchManipulator and added usage of this to the osgviewer example. This manipulator allows switching between the predefined camera viewpoints. The current design limition I ran into is that a MatrixManipulator only manipulates the ViewMatrix, but for this particular manipulator I also want to update the projectionMatrix of the camera when switching to a new viewpoint. This is not implemented because I don't know what would be the best way to design it. Any ideas?
Furthermore Collada also supports orthographic camera's, where an osg::CameraView only supports a perspective camera. Would it be useful to create a CameraView with customizable optics for this?"
from: DEEP_COPY_STATESETS = 8,
to: DEEP_COPY_STATESETS = 1<<3,
showing clearly that this isn't the _value_ 8, but the _bit_ 8. this is an old pattern i see (and like to promulgate) to make code a bit more readable and maintainable.
"
hyper keys defined already, but these modifiers were missing in
GUIEventAdapter::ModKeyMask, and the EventQueue ingored them as well.
The attached diff/archive adds the missing parts for Super/Hyper
modifier key support.
I'm aware that this might not be supported on all systems/keyboards
out of the box, but decided to submit it anyway because:
- developers are aware of differences between input devices
(Some mice have scroll wheels, others don't. Some have five or
more buttons, some have only one. Some keyboards don't have
numpads, some have AltGr, some don't etc.)
- even if someone relies on Hyper/Super in distributed software,
this is easy to fix and doesn't create lock-in conditions
- while the names Hyper/Super may only be common on X11, they are
just symbol names and not OS-specific
- even though some systems might not offer these additional modifiers
by default, it's likely that all of them have at least 8 modifier
levels internally, so it should only be a matter of OS configuration
to make them work
- having super/hyper available is useful to offer a user ways
to define local key definitions that are safe from collisions with
predefined "official" key assignments"
osgViewer::StatsHandler and other handlers which allow you to change the
key(s) you would press to get them to do something. Pretty simple change
but useful in our context and possibly in others too."
multiple GraphicsWindows, this singleton is accessable via GUIEventEvent::getAccumulatedEventState().
Added use of this new singleton in GraphicsWindow* implementations.
Added WindowSizeHandler to osgkeyboard to help with debugging of event state
between windows.
up the StateSetManipulator and moved the initialization of locally cached states
into the handle method to ensure a representative version of the StateSet is captured
lighting and backface culling settings from the event handling code in StatesetManipulator
into public methods. The event handler now calls the public methods. This allows user code
to invoke this same functionality from non-keyboard event inputs without clashing with the
keyboard-invoked functionality."
From Robert Osfield, tweaks to the above to kepp the coding style the same as the rest of the OSG, also
made getPolygonMode() const, and updated the wrappers.
"attached you'll find some modifications to Producer, osgGA and
osgProducer to enable Mac OS X support for
+ scrollwheels,
+ mightymouse-srollballs
+ new tracking-pads with scroll feature
+ tablet-support (pressure, proximity and pointertype) (Wacom only tested)
I think there was a bug in the windows-implementation of scroll-wheel
support (wrong order of ScrollingMotion-enum, casting problem) which is
fixed now.
The scrollwheel-code is a bit klunky across platforms, some devices on
OS X can report an absolute delta in pixel-coordinates not only the
direction, so for now there is scrollingMotion (which describes the
direction) and scrolldeltax and scrolldeltay. I decided to leave the
scrollingmotion-stuff to not break old code relying on this."
keyboard and mouse events.
Added osgGA::EventQueue class to support a thread safe event queue and adaption
of keyboard and mouse events.
Removed osgProducer::EventAdapter as GUIEventAdapter replaces it.
Adapted osgProducer and examples to work with the new changes to osgGA.
change of ' ' to GUIEventAdapter::KEY_Space, fix to url in Matrix_implementation.cpp.
Syntax fixes by Robert Osfield to above submission fix inconsistencies with normal
OSG coding style.
methods, two that takes an index,two that takes a key value. Updated the ViewEventHandler
so the it now uses the getMatrixManipulatorWithIndex() method to avoid previous ambiguity.