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87 lines
4.2 KiB
Markdown
87 lines
4.2 KiB
Markdown
# JustUI: Space distribution and layout
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Layout is the process through which space is allocated to widgets, which are
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then sized and positioned.
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## Content widgets and containers
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Widgets in a scene usually fulfill one of two roles:
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* **Content widgets** such as labels, input fields, or menu browsers, display
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the interface and receive events. They often have no children, and do their
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own rendering.
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* **Containers** such as rows and columns, stacks, or grids, organize other
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widgets so they align nicely and don't overlap. The widgets they organize are
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their children; they themselves often perform no rendering.
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JustUI does not enforce this separation, and a single widget can both handle
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contents and organize children. But the features are usually designed with one
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of the two roles in mind.
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## Layouts
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Layouts are parameters that can be attached to widgets to automatically size
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and position their widgets in a useful fashion. This is mostly designed for
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containers. There are currently 4 types of layouts:
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* **Horizontal boxes** and **vertical boxes** arrange children in a row or a
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column, respectively. Each widget gets its desired size; if there is space
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left, widgets can expand according to stretch parameters (more on that
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later).
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* **Stacks** arrange all the widgets on top of each other. Only one widget is
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visible at a time. This is useful for tabbed interfaces.
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* **Grids** arrange all widgets in a grid. (TODO: WIP)
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A widget that does not have a layout needs to manually determine its own
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desired size as well as the position its children.
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## The layout process
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The layout process has two phases.
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1. **Size estimation.** In the first phase, each widget declares a desired
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size. This size often depends on the size of the children, so this phase
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proceeds bottom-up: first the children declare their desired sizes, then the
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parents deduce their own desired sizes, and so on.
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2. **Space distribution.** In the second phase, space is distributed by the
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parents to the children. If the parents have more available space than the
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children request, extra space is distributed as well. This phase is
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top-down: first the root distributes the available space to its children,
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then these children split their shares between their own children, etc.
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All of this proceeds automatically unless some widgets cannot provide a natural
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size (or only a useless one), in which case the user should give a hint.
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## Internals
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During the first phase, the content size of each widget is evaluated by either
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the layout's `csize()` function, or the polymorphic widget's `csize()`
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override. Then `jwidget_msize()` adds in the geometry and stores the margin-box
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size in the `w` and `h` attributes.
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During the second phase, `jwidget_layout_apply()` distributes the space by
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dispatching to the layout's `apply()` function, or the polymorphic widget's
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`apply()` override. It proceeds recursively in a depth-first, prefix order.
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## Layout control
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The widget type provides a natural content size, but the user has the final say
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in the size of any widget. Any widget can have a minimum and maximum size
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specified, and every layout guarantees that the allocated size falls in this
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range (note that limits are examined during the second phase, and the natural
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content size does not need to be in the acceptable range).
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Additionally, the user can provide stretch rates indicating whether the widget
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can use more space horizontally and vertically. When there is space to
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distribute and several widgets are competing to use it, space is allocated in
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proportion to stretch rates. For instance, a widget with double the stretch
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rate of its competitors will get twice as much space as them.
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In certain occasions, one might want to disregard the natural content size
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entirely and distribute space based only on stretch rates, for instance to
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split a screen in evenly-sized columns even when the contents of the columns
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have different natural sizes. In this case, one can set the columns to a fixed
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width of 0 while enabling stretching-beyond-limits. Stretching beyond limits
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will allow the widgets to grow despite being of fixed size, and because they
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all start with the same width of 0, they will all end up with the same size.
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