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CLK/OSBindings/Mac/Clock Signal/Views/CSScanTargetView.h
2020-09-13 22:30:17 -04:00

166 lines
5.6 KiB
Objective-C

//
// CSScanTargetView.h
// Clock Signal
//
// Created by Thomas Harte on 16/07/2015.
// Copyright 2015 Thomas Harte. All rights reserved.
//
#import <Foundation/Foundation.h>
#import <AppKit/AppKit.h>
#import <MetalKit/MetalKit.h>
@class CSScanTargetView;
@class CSScanTarget;
@protocol CSScanTargetViewResponderDelegate <NSObject>
/*!
Supplies a keyDown event to the delegate.
@param event The @c NSEvent describing the keyDown.
*/
- (void)keyDown:(nonnull NSEvent *)event;
/*!
Supplies a keyUp event to the delegate.
@param event The @c NSEvent describing the keyUp.
*/
- (void)keyUp:(nonnull NSEvent *)event;
/*!
Supplies a flagsChanged event to the delegate.
@param event The @c NSEvent describing the flagsChanged.
*/
- (void)flagsChanged:(nonnull NSEvent *)event;
/*!
Supplies a paste event to the delegate.
*/
- (void)paste:(nonnull id)sender;
@optional
/*!
Supplies a mouse moved event to the delegate. This functions only if
shouldCaptureMouse is set to YES, in which case the view will ensure it captures
the mouse and returns only relative motion
(Cf. CGAssociateMouseAndMouseCursorPosition). It will also elide mouseDragged:
(and rightMouseDragged:, etc) and mouseMoved: events.
*/
- (void)mouseMoved:(nonnull NSEvent *)event;
/*!
Supplies a mouse button down event. This elides mouseDown, rightMouseDown and otherMouseDown.
@c shouldCaptureMouse must be set to @c YES to receive these events.
*/
- (void)mouseDown:(nonnull NSEvent *)event;
/*!
Supplies a mouse button up event. This elides mouseUp, rightMouseUp and otherMouseUp.
@c shouldCaptureMouse must be set to @c YES to receive these events.
*/
- (void)mouseUp:(nonnull NSEvent *)event;
/*!
Announces 'capture' of the mouse — i.e. that the view is now preventing the mouse from exiting
the window, in order to forward continuous mouse motion.
@param view The view making the announcement.
*/
- (void)scanTargetViewDidCaptureMouse:(nonnull CSScanTargetView *)view;
/*!
Announces that the mouse is no longer captured.
@param view The view making the announcement.
*/
- (void)scanTargetViewDidReleaseMouse:(nonnull CSScanTargetView *)view;
/*!
Announces that the OS mouse cursor is now being displayed again, after having been invisible.
@param view The view making the announcement.
*/
- (void)scanTargetViewDidShowOSMouseCursor:(nonnull CSScanTargetView *)view;
/*!
Announces that the OS mouse cursor will now be hidden.
@param view The view making the announcement.
*/
- (void)scanTargetViewWillHideOSMouseCursor:(nonnull CSScanTargetView *)view;
/*!
Announces receipt of a file by drag and drop to the delegate.
@param view The view making the request.
@param URL The file URL of the received file.
*/
- (void)scanTargetView:(nonnull CSScanTargetView *)view didReceiveFileAtURL:(nonnull NSURL *)URL;
@end
/*!
Although I'm still on the fence about this as a design decision, CSScanTargetView is itself responsible
for creating and destroying a CVDisplayLink. There's a practical reason for this: you'll get real synchronisation
only if a link is explicitly tied to a particular display, and the CSScanTargetView therefore owns the knowledge
necessary to decide when to create and modify them. It doesn't currently just propagate "did change screen"-type
messages because I haven't yet found a way to track that other than polling, in which case I might as well put
that into the display link callback.
*/
@protocol CSScanTargetViewDisplayLinkDelegate
/*!
Informs the delegate that the display link has fired.
*/
- (void)scanTargetViewDisplayLinkDidFire:(nonnull CSScanTargetView *)view now:(nonnull const CVTimeStamp *)now outputTime:(nonnull const CVTimeStamp *)outputTime;
@end
/*!
Provides a visible scan target with a refresh-linked update timer that can forward a subset
of typical first-responder actions.
*/
@interface CSScanTargetView : MTKView
@property (nonatomic, weak, nullable) id <CSScanTargetViewResponderDelegate> responderDelegate;
@property (atomic, weak, nullable) id <CSScanTargetViewDisplayLinkDelegate> displayLinkDelegate;
/// Determines whether the view offers mouse capturing — i.e. if the user clicks on the view then
/// then the system cursor is disabled and the mouse events defined by CSScanTargetViewResponderDelegate
/// are forwarded, unless and until the user releases the mouse using the control+command shortcut.
@property (nonatomic, assign) BOOL shouldCaptureMouse;
/// Determines whether the CSScanTargetViewResponderDelegate of this window expects to use the command
/// key as though it were any other key — i.e. all command combinations should be forwarded to the delegate,
/// not being allowed to trigger regular application shortcuts such as command+q or command+h.
///
/// How the view respects this will depend on other state; if this view is one that captures the mouse then it
/// will usurp command only while the mouse is captured.
///
/// TODO: what's smart behaviour if this view doesn't capture the mouse? Probably
/// force a similar capturing behaviour?
@property (nonatomic, assign) BOOL shouldUsurpCommand;
/*!
Ends the timer tracking time; should be called prior to giving up the last owning reference
to ensure that any retain cycles implied by the timer are resolved.
*/
- (void)invalidate;
/*!
Ensures output begins on all pending scans.
*/
- (void)updateBacking;
/*!
Instructs that the mouse cursor, if currently captured, should be released.
*/
- (void)releaseMouse;
/*!
@returns An image of the view's current contents.
*/
- (nonnull NSBitmapImageRep *)imageRepresentation;
/*!
@returns The CSScanTarget being used for this display.
*/
@property(nonatomic, readonly, nonnull) CSScanTarget *scanTarget;
@end