Some randome color off the google colour picker that's supposed to look more
like a real paper color. This also means we set the general background white
now to give it a better contrast.
On startup and before we connected to a tablet, let's display a missing tablet
icon. Taken from the tablet icon, combined with the X from one of the network
icons in the Adwaita theme.
Once we get a sync notification, we just hide that one and done.
This broke at some point, let's fix it again by moving to the drawing and
calling refresh() from there - no need for the DrawingPerspective to call into
the drawing here.
The tuhigui.ini settings file where we store the orientation of the device is
now the same config directory tuhi dumps its data in.
The svgs are in an svg subdirectory, just to make them easier to find.
Drop the user-visible separation, make everything just Tuhi. Directory
structure remains largely separate (tuhi vs tuhigui) except for the po files
which are in the top-level directory because convention.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
This is a plain subtree merge without any changes to the tuhigui tree itself.
As we'll keep the distinction between the DBus server and the GTK UI, the
directory layout will reflect that.
A user may want to download the drawing multiple times. And besides, after
switching back to the default icon theme, I couldn't find a decent icon
anyway.
Enable the delete button that's been hidden away so far. When clicked, we
suffix the cached json file with '.deleted'. This also causes a popup with an
undo button to appear (taken from Nautilus). When clicked, that button will
restore the drawing again.
This is really all just renaming anyway, because nothing ever gets deleted
here.
An extra filter is needed to skip Tuhi drawings that have been deleted in the
GUI - we don't want to add the drawings we just deleted again just because
Tuhi still keeps them in cache.
Tuhi caches the json data but has no guarantee about storage. So we cache the
json we get from Tuhi and store it in our settings dir through our Config
backend. Then we use those cached values to generate the SVG files.
This is saved for posterity in the new settings file, so we need a new Config
object (singleton is enough here).
For now, whenever the orientation changes, we just wipe our UI and re-generate
all SVG files. Much easier than messing with proper SVG rotation given that a
device should only ever change between rotations once.
Previously we only ever updated on the initial device assignments. Especially
when the device is offline while started, this means we never get the right
icon.