* Merge this first: https://github.com/emilk/egui/pull/5517
This aligns all rectangles and (horizontal or vertical) line segments to
the physical pixel grid in the `epaint::Tessellator`, making these
shapes appear crisp everywhere.
* Closes https://github.com/emilk/egui/issues/5164
* Closes https://github.com/emilk/egui/issues/3667
This undoes a lot of the explicit, egui-side aligning added in:
* https://github.com/emilk/egui/pull/4943
The new approach has several benefits over the old one:
* It is done automatically by epaint, so it is applied to everything (no
longer opt-in)
* It is applied after any layer transforms (so it always works)
* It makes line segments crisper on high-DPI screens
* All filled rectangles now has sides that end on pixel boundaries
Hey! I am not sure if this is something that's been considered before
and decided against (I couldn't find any PR's or issues).
This change removes the internal profiling macros in library crates and
the `puffin` feature and replaces it with similar functions in the
[profiling](https://github.com/aclysma/profiling) crate. This crate
provides a layer of abstraction over various profiler instrumentation
crates and allows library users to pick their favorite (supported)
profiler.
An additional benefit for puffin users is that dependencies of egui are
included in the instrumentation output too (mainly wgpu which uses the
profiling crate), so more details might be available when profiling.
A breaking change is that instead of using the `puffin` feature on egui,
users that want to profile the crate with puffin instead have to enable
the `profile-with-puffin` feature on the profiling crate. Similarly they
could instead choose to use `profile-with-tracy` etc.
I tried to add a 'tracy' feature to egui_demo_app in order to showcase ,
however the /scripts/check.sh currently breaks on mutually exclusive
features (which this introduces), so I decided against including it for
the initial PR. I'm happy to iterate more on this if there is interest
in taking this PR though.
Screenshot showing the additional info for wgpu now available when using
puffin

As someone who uses "grey" instead of "gray", it is annoying that my
autocomplete can never find any of the "gray" color related things, so
this adds doc aliases for that.
* [x] I have followed the instructions in the PR template
egui never accesses the `FontDefinitions`' member fields mutably, except
in `fonts_tweak_ui` where it cloned the `FontDefinitions` object anyway.
This patch reduces system memory consumption for shared font
definitions.
And also removes some overhead from copying (e.g. for the per
`pixel_per_points` font atlas)
Also it allows to keep a copy of the font definitions outside of egui.
In my App that uses international fonts:
Before:

New:

Note: If `Arc` is not wanted, then it could ofc be abstracted away.
I know this is quite a breaking change API wise, but would like to hear
your opinion.
When using fonts with an average of 50,000 characters,
'epaint texture atlas overflowed!' may be printed and cause problems.
It is necessary to expand the max value related to texture.
* Closes#5256
---------
Co-authored-by: Emil Ernerfeldt <emil.ernerfeldt@gmail.com>
make it easier to add fonts.
For example if I want to add a custom FontFamily or if the user wants to
add a Chinese fallback
* [x] I have followed the instructions in the PR template
---------
Co-authored-by: Emil Ernerfeldt <emil.ernerfeldt@gmail.com>
* Closes https://github.com/emilk/egui/pull/5106
* Closes https://github.com/emilk/egui/issues/5084
Protect against rounding errors in egui layout code.
Say the user asks to wrap at width 200.0.
The text layout wraps, and reports that the final width was 196.0
points.
This than trickles up the `Ui` chain and gets stored as the width for a
tooltip (say).
On the next frame, this is then set as the max width for the tooltip,
and we end up calling the text layout code again, this time with a wrap
width of 196.0.
Except, somewhere in the `Ui` chain with added margins etc, a rounding
error was introduced,
so that we actually set a wrap-width of 195.9997 instead.
Now the text that fit perfectly at 196.0 needs to wrap one word earlier,
and so the text re-wraps and reports a new width of 185.0 points.
And then the cycle continues.
So this PR limits the text wrap-width to be an integer.
Related issues:
* https://github.com/emilk/egui/issues/4927
* https://github.com/emilk/egui/issues/4928
* https://github.com/emilk/egui/issues/5163
---
Pleas test this @rustbasic
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Adds support for mipmaps in the `glow` backend.
Should be possible to implement for `wgpu` in the future as well, but
requires a custom compute kernel.
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- I fixed the TODO to use the `log` crate instead of `eprintln`
- Set the rust-version in the `scripts/check.sh` to the same as egui is
on
- I made xtask use anyhow to remove some unwraps
* [x] I have followed the instructions in the PR template
* Closes https://github.com/emilk/egui/issues/4976
* Part of #4378
* Implements parts of #843
### Background
Some widgets (like `Grid` and `Table`) needs to know the width of future
elements in order to properly size themselves. For instance, the width
of the first column of a grid may not be known until all rows of the
grid has been added, at which point it is too late. Therefore these
widgets store sizes from the previous frame. This leads to "first-frame
jitter", were the content is placed in the wrong place for one frame,
before being accurately laid out in subsequent frames.
### What
This PR adds the function `ctx.request_discard` which discards the
visual output and does another _pass_, i.e. calls the whole app UI code
once again (in eframe this means calling `App::update` again). This will
thus discard the shapes produced by the wrongly placed widgets, and
replace it with new shapes. Note that only the visual output is
discarded - all other output events are accumulated.
Calling `ctx.request_discard` should only be done in very rare
circumstances, e.g. when a `Grid` is first shown. Calling it every frame
will mean the UI code will become unnecessarily slow.
Two safe-guards are in place:
* `Options::max_passes` is by default 2, meaning egui will never do more
than 2 passes even if `request_discard` is called on every pass
* If multiple passes is done for multiple frames in a row, a warning
will be printed on the screen in debug builds:

### Breaking changes
A bunch of things that had "frame" in the name now has "pass" in them
instead:
* Functions called `begin_frame` and `end_frame` are now called
`begin_pass` and `end_pass`
* `FrameState` is now `PassState`
* etc
### TODO
* [x] Figure out good names for everything (`ctx.request_discard`)
* [x] Add API to query if we're gonna repeat this frame (to early-out
from expensive rendering)
* [x] Clear up naming confusion (pass vs frame) e.g. for `FrameState`
* [x] Figure out when to call this
* [x] Show warning on screen when there are several frames in a row with
multiple passes
* [x] Document
* [x] Default on or off?
* [x] Change `Context::frame_nr` name/docs
* [x] Rename `Context::begin_frame/end_frame` and deprecate the old ones
* [x] Test with Rerun
* [x] Document breaking changes
Improves performances significantly (about 40 times) according to the
benchmarks.
* Closes <https://github.com/emilk/egui/issues/5086>
* [x] I have followed the instructions in the PR template
You can see this feature in action
[here](https://docs.rs/sysinfo/latest/src/sysinfo/common/system.rs.html#46)
or on any of dtolnay's crates and many others. I found myself going
through your project code recently on docs.rs and I was a bit sad I
couldn't have this feature enabled. This should fix it at next release.
:)
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* Closes <https://github.com/emilk/egui/issues/4776>
* [x] I have followed the instructions in the PR template
I've been meaning to look into this for a while but finally bit the
bullet this week. Contrary to what I initially thought, the problem of
blurry lines is unrelated to feathering because it also happens with
feathering disabled.
The root cause is that lines tend to land on pixel boundaries, and
because of that, frequently used strokes (e.g. 1pt), end up partially
covering pixels. This is especially noticeable on 1ppp displays.
There were a couple of things to fix, namely: individual lines like
separators and indents but also shape strokes (e.g. Frame).
Lines were easy, I just made sure we round them to the nearest pixel
_center_, instead of the nearest pixel boundary.
Strokes were a little more complicated. To illustrate why, here’s an
example: if we're rendering a 5x5 rect (black fill, red stroke), we
would expect to see something like this:

The fill and the stroke to cover entire pixels. Instead, egui was
painting the stroke partially inside and partially outside, centered
around the shape’s path (blue line):

Both methods are valid for different use-cases but the first one is what
we’d typically want for UIs to feel crisp and pixel perfect. It's also
how CSS borders work (related to #4019 and #3284).
Luckily, we can use the normal computed for each `PathPoint` to adjust
the location of the stroke to be outside, inside, or in the middle.
These also are the 3 types of strokes available in tools like Photoshop.
This PR introduces an enum `StrokeKind` which determines if a
`PathStroke` should be tessellated outside, inside, or _on_ the path
itself. Where "outside" is defined by the directions normals point to.
Tessellator will now use `StrokeKind::Outside` for closed shapes like
rect, ellipse, etc. And `StrokeKind::Middle` for the rest since there's
no meaningful "outside" concept for open paths. This PR doesn't expose
`StrokeKind` to user-land, but we can implement that later so that users
can render shapes and decide where to place the stroke.
### Strokes test
(blue lines represent the size of the rect being rendered)
`Stroke::Middle` (current behavior, 1px and 3px are blurry)

`Stroke::Outside` (proposed default behavior for closed paths)

`Stroke::Inside` (for completeness but unused at the moment)

### Demo App
The best way to review this PR is to run the demo on a 1ppp display,
especially to test hover effects. Everything should look crisper. Also
run it in a higher dpi screen to test that nothing broke 🙏.
Before:

After (notice the sharper lines):

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I removed (I hope so) all wildcard imports I found.
For me on my pc this improved the build time:
- for egui -5s
- for eframe -12s
* [x] I have followed the instructions in the PR template
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* Closes <https://github.com/emilk/egui/issues/3482>
* [x] I have followed the instructions in the PR template
Regarding the statement in #3482,
https://docs.rs/egui/latest/egui/layers/struct.GraphicLayers.html#method.drain
accepts a HashMap, but not sure if that is enough to keep the re-export.
This allows license checking tools to omit the OFL and UFL licenses when
`default_fonts` are turned off.
There was some discussion of versioning on the original issue; I have
chosen to label this version as `0.28.1` to match the other crates.
Happy to adjust the version as needed.
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* Closes <https://github.com/emilk/egui/issues/2321>
* [X] I have followed the instructions in the PR template
---------
Co-authored-by: Alex Pinkus <pinkus@amazon.com>
Previously, many labels had non-integer widths. This lead to rounding
errors.
This was most notable for the new `Area` sizing code:
We would run the initial sizing pass, to measure the size of e.g. a
tooltip.
Say the tooltip contains text that was 100.123 ui points wide. With a
16pt border, that becomes 116.123, which is stored in the `Area` state
as the width. The next frame, we use that stored size as the wrapping
width. With perfect precision, we would then tell the label to wrap to
100.123 pts, which the text would _just_ fit in. However, due to
rounding errors we might end up asking it to wrap to 100.12**2** pts,
meaning the last word would now wrap and end up on the next line.
By rounding label sizes to perfect integers, we avoid such rounding
errors, and most ui elements will now end up on perfect integer point
coordinates (and `f32` can precisely express and do arithmetic on all
integers < 2^24).
Visually this has very little impact. Some labels move by a pixel here
and there, mostly for the better.
* Closes#4473
This PR introduce `Style::wrap_mode`, which adds support for text
truncation in addition to text wrapping. This PR also update some width
calculation of the ComboBox.
#### Core
- Add `egui::TextWrapMode` (pure enum with `Extend`, `Wrap`, `Truncate`)
- Add `Style::wrap_mode: Option<tTextWrapMode>`
- **DEPRECATED**: `Style::wrap`, use `Style::wrap_mode` instead.
- Add `Ui::wrap_mode()` to return the wrap mode to use in the current
ui. If specified in `Style`, return it. Otherwise, return
`TextWrapMode::Wrap` for vertical layout and wrapping horizontal layout,
and `TextWrapMode::Extend` otherwise.
- **DEPRECATED**: `Ui::wrap_text()`, use `Ui::wrap_mode` instead.
#### Widget
- Update the width calculation of the `ComboBox` button (_not_ its popup
menu).
- Now, `ComboBox::width()` (defaulting to `Spacing::combo_width`) is
always considered a minimum width and will extend the `Ui`, regardless
of the selected text width and wrap mode.
- Introduce `ComboBox::wrap_mode`, which overrides `Ui::wrap_mode` for
the selected text layout.
- Note: since `ComboBox` uses `ui.horizontal` internally, the default
wrap mode is always `TextWrapMode::Extend`, regardless of the caller's
`Ui`'s layout.
- The `ComboBox` button no longer extend to `ui.available_width()` with
wrapping is enabled.
- **BREAKING**: `ComboBox::wrap()` no longer has a `bool` argument and
is now a short-hand for `ComboBox::wrap_mode(TextWrapMode::Wrap)`.
- Added `ComboBox::truncate()` as short-hand for
`ComboBox::wrap_mode(TextWrapMode::Truncate)`.
- Update `Label`
- Add `Label::wrap_mode()` to specify the text wrap mode.
- **BREAKING**: `Label::wrap()` no longer has a `bool` argument and is
now a short-hand for `Label::wrap_mode(TextWrapMode::Wrap)`.
- **BREAKING**: `Label::truncate()` no longer has a `bool` argument and
is now a short-hand for `Label::wrap_mode(TextWrapMode::Truncate)`.
- Update `Button`
- Add `Button::wrap_mode()` to specify the text wrap mode.
- **BREAKING**: `Button::wrap()` no longer has a `bool` argument and is
now a short-hand for `Button::wrap_mode(TextWrapMode::Wrap)`.
- Added `Button::truncate()` as short-hand for
`Button::wrap_mode(TextWrapMode::Truncate)`.
#### Low-level
- **BREAKING**: `WidgetText::into_galley()` now takes an
`Option<TextWrapMode>` instead of a `Option<bool>` argument.
- **BREAKING**: `WidgetText::into_galley_impl(()` now takes a
`TextWrapping` argument instead of `wrap: bool` and `availalbe_width:
f32` arguments.
---------
Co-authored-by: Emil Ernerfeldt <emil.ernerfeldt@gmail.com>
I wanted to implement a font picker that loads all system fonts but ran
into panics due to missing glyphs. Falling back to an empty glyph when
none of the fallback glyphs are available avoids the panic.
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Inspired by:
44d65f41ac/Cargo.toml (L65)
I took the liberty of removing that comment since I *think* that I got
all "relevant" ones (showing up more than once, sort of).
`parking_lot`'s `RwLock` allows this, so probably `epaint`'s `RwLock`
should too.
Although I'm not sure how much it's intended for users, rather than just
internal use by `egui`.
Removes `egui_assert` etc and replaces it with normal `debug_assert`
calls.
Previously you could opt-in to more runtime checks using feature flags.
Now these extra runtime checks are always enabled for debug builds.
You are most likely to encounter them if you use negative sizes or NaNs
or other similar bugs.
These usually indicate bugs in user space.