... almost. There are some artifacts when you zoom out while recording that I
can't figure out, but whatever.
Also fix performance issues caused by last attempt at rec display while zoom.
For example, if you're in a note and something about the mode changes, it's the
underlying region context that needs to change. So, seems we need a stack of
entry contexts to deal with this sort of thing.
Switching in/out of smart mode still doesn't update immediately because we
don't have the y-coordinate needed to update it.
When entered, the keyboard is grabbed when the selection becomes non-empty, and
ungrabbed if it becomes empty again or the region is left or the user switches
out of internal mode.
This fixes scroll in internal mode and note moving with arrow keys. Also frees
up useful keybindings when there is no note selection, which is much nicer than
the "nothing works in edit mode at all" greedy grab approach used previously.
Attempt #874327892 of getting this damned grabbing right.
Also push the increasingly unwieldly paste parameters into a context object.
As with othe things, currently it is only possible to do "cross-type paste" by
explicitly selecting the target track. We will need to get automation region
view selection working to do better here, but at least for now it's possible to
get the data over.
This lets us get a more explicit handle on time conversions, and is the main
step towards using actual beat:tick time and getting away from floating point
precision problems.
The idea here is that pasting several times to the same location doesn't make
sense. Instead, the paste is appended past the last paste, snapped to the
grid. This make it simple to replicate a given section a number of times,
simply by copying once and pasting several times.
This behaviour only appears when successive pastes are done to the same
location (whatever the edit point is). When the paste point changes, the
"multi-paste" state is reset.
Boots 'n cats 'n boots 'n cats.
Remove Canvas::Layout, use Canvas::Container for the same purpose, move child-rendering into Item::render_children() so that it
could theoretically be used by any derived type.
commit fdbae82077db53add90df7448a06869dac89acc6
Author: Paul Davis <paul@linuxaudiosystems.com>
Date: Wed Mar 27 21:45:28 2013 -0400
mammoth changes in basic signal flow, total redesign of MIDI channel filtering and more.
commit 59343a8283698e02bc0f622313b29e98f449e4c8
Author: Paul Davis <paul@linuxaudiosystems.com>
Date: Wed Mar 27 01:58:53 2013 -0400
initial working version after changes to MIDI channel filtering. may affect metering input too. testing not yet finished
this commit merges many deep changes in ardour's internal architecture,
combined with a total redesign of how MIDI channel filtering works.
data in a track used to flow from JACK port buffers to diskstream's ringbuffers
and was then copied from the ringbuffers into a BufferSet for use during
Route::process_output_buffers(). The butler thread would handle the movement of
data between the ringbuffers and disk.
with this commit, data now flows from JACK port buffers into the BufferSet used
for Route processing, and is copied from the BufferSet into the diskstream's
ringbuffers (the butler thread continues to handle interactions with disk as
usual).
this change allowed a dramatic consolidation of code and simplification of most
aspects of Track/Route::roll() and Track/Route::no_roll(). in particular, see
Route::fill_buffers_with_input() which now concisely describes how we move data
from JACK port buffers into the BufferSet for all Route types (including Tracks).
this work was initially motivated by changing MIDI channel filtering so that we
can process capture and playback independently. there is now a very clean
pathway for this - see MidiTrack::roll() (NOTE: This needs implementing in the
no-roll case too - a TODO item).
the channel selector for MIDI tracks has been moved out of the track header and
is now accessible via the context menu. more work is likely here, to make it
(more) obvious to the user when filtering is going on.
Do this via a simple MasterDeviceNames::note_name() function. The same really
needs to be done for program names, this stuff is absolutely brutal to use.
Store note names in a vector indexed by number instead of a list with string
"numbers" for reasonable lookup time.
Make some references const that should be.
git-svn-id: svn://localhost/ardour2/branches/3.0@13908 d708f5d6-7413-0410-9779-e7cbd77b26cf