A few minor changes like passing in a filename and fixing the different
spellings of the orientations.
In order to use it from kete though we have to mess with the PYTHONPATH. But
since it's a in-tree tool only anyway... meh.
This loses the ability to disable pressure on tablets. I think that's just a
leftover from before we knew how to handle pressure in SVG exports. We should
just fix that properly instead of having a config option here.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
Make sure our dimensions are in actual µm.
Note that this will mess with any cached JSON files since they are now on a
different scale.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
gresources and svgwrite don't (yet?) take a Path though, so we have to use
os.fspath() to convert those.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
This requires adjusting the svg conversion in kete as well, afaict the 1000
range there was chosen because it's (almost) the midpoint of the Bamboo series
with 2048 pressure grades. So let's use half of 0x10000 instead, which is
approximately 0x8000 as the crow flies.
Fixes#142
This requires adjusting the svg conversion in kete as well, afaict the 1000
range there was chosen because it's (almost) the midpoint of the Bamboo series
with 2048 pressure grades. So let's use half of 0x10000 instead, which is
approximately 0x8000 as the crow flies.
Fixes#142
Propagated whenever we start talking to the device (and then again when we
stop). The purpose of this signal is merely that a UI can show e.g. a progress
bar while we're talking to the device to ensure the user something is
happening.
Fixes#138
>$ flake8 --ignore=E501,W504 tools
tools/kete.py:35:1: E302 expected 2 blank lines, found 1
tools/kete.py:553:12: E713 test for membership should be 'not in'
tools/kete.py:599:42: E226 missing whitespace around arithmetic operator
tools/kete.py:599:61: E226 missing whitespace around arithmetic operator
tools/kete.py:615:25: E226 missing whitespace around arithmetic operator
tools/kete.py:615:32: E226 missing whitespace around arithmetic operator
tools/kete.py:624:49: E225 missing whitespace around operator
tools/kete.py:871:9: F841 local variable 'e' is assigned to but never used
This is a first implementation of variable stroke pressure. It is based
on a set of individual-width-variable strokes. The ideal implementation
should convert the variable-stroke-width path into an outlined shape.
fixes e4e0a3b ("kete: rename the script from tuhi-kete.py to kete.py")
When renaming tuhi-kete into kete, we forgot to also update
tuhi-kete-sandboxed.py.
Export the supported versions in a Manager property and require the client to
request a specific version in GetJSONData. Without that, the server could
never update the format and clients would have to support every single
historical version to make sure they can run against any version server.
Fixes#98
Because we're totally going to ship tuhi in embedded devices that are going to
be in use until after 2038 when time resets to zero, the world goes big bang
and the only survivers will be 64-bit species. Or something like that. Either
way, the API documentation already said so anyway and the DrawingsAvailable
property is already 64 bit too.
Semi-confusingly: the dbus 64 bit unsigned type is 't', it doesn't stand for
'timestamp'.
we want to be able to open uhid, so we need root access.
Root access is bad, so we fork the process, and then immediately drop
the privileges to talk to the dbus dameon (or to create one).
Python doesn't really like minus signs in file names, especially
when you start importing the modules. Rename kete from tuhi-kete.py
to kete.py so it makes it easier to have other scripts in the tools
folder to borrow code from kete.
The 'searching' notification was only emitted when it goes to stop, which
means we do not get notifications when it starts.
This makes SearchStopped signal redundant for the generic case, but allows
to get notifications if the search failed to start.
Rest is just making sure we have the same handling of events in Listener
and Searcher.
If stop() is called more than once, we might try to disconnect the
signals more than once, which raises some errors.
Better having one central place that handles the disconnect properly.
To be able to run tuhi-kete, we need a tuhi server running. Provide a
script that spawns one if none is running.
Running simple 'python3 setup.py --install' started to go havoc by
complaining that /app/lib/python3.6/site-packages/easy-install.pth
was read-only.
The solution mentioned in https://github.com/flatpak/flatpak-builder/issues/5
didn't do the trick.
So using https://stackoverflow.com/questions/6301003/stopping-setup-py-from-installing-as-egg/27175492#27175492
as a trick to install the dependencies without the egg part
To start tuhi-kete:
$> flatpak run --command=tuhi-kete org.freedesktop.tuhi
Note that currently the fetched files are not available outside of the
sandbox
Related to #62
"pair" is alrady taken by Bluetooth and since we have a bluetooth device here,
it can cause confusion. Use "register" instead, with an explanation in the
README for the more paranoid of us.
Fixes#67
While running the app in flatpak, there are a few deprecation warnings
coming in:
PyGIDeprecationWarning: GObject.SIGNAL_RUN_FIRST is deprecated;
use GObject.SignalFlags.RUN_FIRST instead
PyGIDeprecationWarning: GObject.property is deprecated;
use GObject.Property instead
PyGIDeprecationWarning: GObject.MainLoop is deprecated;
use GLib.MainLoop instead
In the normal mode (without -v) we'd see the errors, but not the messages when
we reconnect. Elevate the "connected to" message to info so it shows up.
And slight rewording, which may or may not be better.
'list' and 'listen' are just too close to each other, meaning the
completion stops at 'list' while the lazy developer/tester want to
do a 'listen'.
Change the name of the less used command so we have separate spaces
for completion
Better keep this in a public place where it won't vanish from our disks.
Note that this is a python 2 script (because btsnoop), and it should not
be part of the installation, ever.