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Commit Graph

12 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Andy McFadden
5a400ab738 Change highlight region
The ListView style was using "Stretch" for TextBoxes in the code list,
which caused the background of the entire address / label / operand
field to be drawn in the highlight color, rather than just the area
covered by the text.  This is fine for address and label, but it just
felt weird for the operand field because that tends to be very wide
(to accommodate strings, bulk hex data, etc).

There doesn't seem to be a way to specify HorizontalContentAlignment
per-column in WPF.  (Note this is different from HorizontalAlignment,
which *is* is a per-column property.)

This changes the style to use HorizontalContentAlignment=Left, so
the highlight just covers the text.  The only time this causes a
functional change is when you highlight an operand for a line that
doesn't have a label, because instead of highlighting an empty
rectangle you now see nothing at all.  (The address field is still
highlighted though.)
2021-11-17 11:40:36 -08:00
Andy McFadden
33aa0ff004 Add operand highlighting
When a code or data line is selected in the code list, if the operand
is an address inside the file, we highlight the address and label.
It's also useful to highlight the other way: when a code or data line
is selected, find all lines whose operands reference it, and highlight
the operand field.

This is a little trickier because there can be multiple references,
but all of the information we need is in the cross-reference table.
2021-11-17 11:18:23 -08:00
Andy McFadden
e6c5c7f8df ORG rework, part 6
Added support for non-addressable regions, which are useful for things
like file headers stripped out by the system loader, or chunks that
get loaded into non-addressable graphics RAM.  Regions are specified
with the "NA" address value.  The code list displays the address field
greyed out, starting from zero (which is kind of handy if you want to
know the relative offset within the region).

Putting labels in non-addressable regions doesn't make sense, but
symbol resolution is complicated enough that we really only have two
options: ignore the labels entirely, or allow them but warn of their
presence.  The problem isn't so much the label, which you could
legitimately want to access from an extension script, but rather the
references to them from code or data.  So we keep the label and add a
warning to the Messages list when we see a reference.

Moved NON_ADDR constants to Address class.  AddressMap now has a copy.
This is awkward because Asm65 and CommonUtil don't share.

Updated the asm code generators to understand NON_ADDR, and reworked
the API so that Merlin and cc65 output is correct for nested regions.

Address region changes are now noted in the anattribs array, which
makes certain operations faster than checking the address map.  It
also fixes a failure to recognize mid-instruction region changes in
the code analyzer.

Tweaked handling of synthetic regions, which are non-addressable areas
generated by the linear address map traversal to fill in any "holes".
The address region editor now treats attempts to edit them as
creation of a new region.
2021-09-30 21:11:26 -07:00
Andy McFadden
5a88a805d0 Fix proportions for animated GIFs
As with still images, animations are rendered at original size and
then scaled with HTML properties.

Also, fixed the blurry scaling on animation thumbnails.  I couldn't
find a way to do nearest-neighbor scaling in the code-behind without
resorting to System.Drawing (WinForms), so I added an overlay image
to the various grids.
2019-12-25 10:28:40 -08:00
Andy McFadden
e82678126f Various minor tweaks
Added comments, renamed files, removed cruft.

Stop showing the visualization tag name in the code list.  It's
often redundant with the code label, and it's distracting.  (We may
want to make this an option so you can Ctrl+F to find a tag.)
2019-12-07 11:42:26 -08:00
Andy McFadden
1cdb31de32 Visualizer improvements
Various changes:
- Generally treat visualization sets like long comments and notes
  when it comes to defining data region boundaries.  (We were doing
  this for selections; now we're also doing it for format-as-word
  and in the data analyzer when scanning for strings/fill.)
- Clear the visualization cache when the address map is altered.
  This is necessary for visualizers that dereference addresses.
- Read the Apple II screen image from a series of addresses rather
  than a series of offsets.  This allows it to work when the image
  is contiguous in memory but split into chunks in the file.
- Put 1 pixel of padding around the images in the main code list,
  so they don't blend into the background.
- Remember the last visualizer used, so we can re-use it the next
  time the user selects "new".
- Move min-size hack from Loaded to ContentRendered, as it apparently
  spoils CenterOwner placement.
2019-12-06 15:05:49 -08:00
Andy McFadden
2f56c56e5c Add visualization thumbnails
Thumbnails are now visible in the main list and in the visualization
set editor.  They're generated on first need, and regenerated when
the set of plugins changes.

Added a checkerboard background for the visualization editor bitmap
preview.  (It looks all official now.)
2019-12-03 16:11:21 -08:00
Andy McFadden
365864ccdf More progress on visualization
Implemented Apple II hi-res bitmap conversion.  Supports B&W and
color.  Uses essentially the same algorithm as CiderPress.

Experimented with displaying non-text items in ListView.  I assumed
it would work, since it's the sort of thing WPF is designed to do,
but it's always wise to approach with caution.  Visualization Sets
now show a 64x64 button as a placeholder for the eventual thumbnail.

Some things were being flaky, which turned out to be because I
wasn't Prepare()ing the plugins before using them from Edit
Visualization.  To make this a deterministic failure I added an
Unprepare() call that tells the plugin that we're all done.

NOTE: this breaks all existing plugins.
2019-11-30 18:02:03 -08:00
Andy McFadden
df2f3803f4 SourceGen After Dark
Most of SourceGen uses standard WPF controls, which get their default
style from the system theme.  The main disassembly list uses a
custom style, and always looks like the Windows default theme.

Some people greatly prefer white text on a black background, so we
now provide a way to get that.  This also requires muting the colors
used for Notes, since those were chosen to contrast with black text.

This does not affect anything other than the ListView used for
code, because everything else can be set through the Windows
"personalization" interface.  We might want to change the way the
Notes window looks though, to avoid having glowing bookmarks on
the side.
2019-10-12 17:23:32 -07:00
Andy McFadden
e1a9100a8f Fully style the code list view
We were changing the control template for lines with long comments
and notes, matching the default Win10 style.  This got ugly when a
non-default theme was being used, particularly "dark" themes,
because the long-comment lines looked significantly different from
everything else.

We now fully specify the style for the ListView and ListViewItems,
which means everybody's main window now looks like the default Win10
style.  Which is unfortunate, but significantly easier than creating
a full set of theme-specific styles.

We now specify black text for highlighted address/label fields,
because they otherwise become illegible when we apply our background
highlight color.  In the Notes window, we set the background of
un-highlighted entries to white, so that we can always read it with
black text.

Addresses issue #50.
2019-10-09 11:50:33 -07:00
Andy McFadden
54e7f68490 Make modified flags stand out
This changes the color of the status flags on lines where the flags
have been overridden.
2019-09-02 15:18:55 -07:00
Andy McFadden
c64f72d147 Move WPF code from SourceGenWPF to SourceGen 2019-07-20 13:28:37 -07:00