* Remove docs from Resources.cpp (leaving the brief description).
* Reformat Resources.h to style it like so many other header files.
* There is one not-entirely style based change. I renamed the outSize
parameter or the LoadResource method to _size as is our convention for out
parameters.
And clean it up a bit. Kept brief description in source.
* Also added Axel to authors in Path.dox and Path.cpp because his name
appears in git blame as working on the docs and code for the file.
I hope he doesn't mind.
* Delete the docs from NodeInfo.cpp and NodeInfo.h
* I snuck a couple of style fixes into NodeInfo.cpp
* I had to make a small modification to MimeType.dox to prevent it
from overriding the docs of one of the methods in NodeInfo.dox.
I made the following changes to the original patch:
* Add const to the cursor setting functions.
* Removed the legacy cursor copying code.
* Minor coding style cleanup.
* use only a single static object (MutableLocaleRoster) instead of
two, which avoids any problems if the order of static object
destruction would destroy RosterData before MutableLocaleRoster
* rename BPrivate::RosterData to BPrivate::LocaleRosterData and move
it into a header and implementation file of its own
This should hopefully fix problems encountered with a clang-compiled
Locale Kit.
After this change, low level cpuidle drivers load the generic cpuidle
module if they can support the underlying platform.
change the intel cpuidle driver accordingly, now it's loaded by acpi
bus manager during boot, although it doesn't depend on acpi
Signed-off-by: Fredrik Holmqvist <fredrik.holmqvist@gmail.com>
This module will load the various lowlevel cpuidle modules' implementations
during initialiation. If it finds one available module, it will change
the global gCpuIdleFunc as its own better one.
When idle, cpuidle module will select the best cstate and enter it by
calling the lowlevel module's implementation.
Signed-off-by: Yongcong Du <ycdu.vmcore@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Fredrik Holmqvist <fredrik.holmqvist@gmail.com>
* We felt that me adding this didn't really
properly communicate the spirit of the
email approval. You really can't just
'change' a license from MIT without author
approval... so this is superfluous.
* A copy of the email approving this change is
in the LICENSE.txt file
* This clears up several concerns
* We now have permission to clean / update GLUT
code and redistrubute its binaries.
* We have to ensure all of Mark's work is *not*
GPL licensed as per his wishes.
* GCC 4.7 is more picky than GCC 4.6, so have to make changes accordingly
* Changes include addressing issues with scoping, redeclaration, etc.
Thanks Rene and Ingo for your input on these changes
Also gave the Up Arrow and Down Arrow a scroll arrow. The up arrow works
but the down arrow doesn't because the sibling menu is stealing the
MouseDown event."
instead of trying to make it follow fExpando just make it a fixed
size on creation. It is invisible and extends to the bottom of the
screen. fExpando grows inside it, and the window follows fExpando.
When the window grows taller than the screenframe the arrows are
added. You can scroll with the mouse wheel, but I haven't yet gotten
scrolling to work from clicking. Deskbar still crashes when going
from Mini mode to vertical expando mode. I have no idea why.
Rename ScrollMenu.cpp to MenuScrollView.cpp
Half step towards making this class work as part of Deskbar without
extending any other classes. Scrolling works both with mouse and
scroll wheel. Redraws on scroll, need to make that work better.
Also need to move classes out of the Interface Kit and into Deskbar.
Modify the ScrollMenu class to use the layout kit by adding a constructor that doesn't take a view.
Get the BScrollMenu class to follow the size of the BMenu it is a parent of. Adjust the scrollers to appear in the right places. This is a WIP but it works in Deskbar, next step is to integrate this directly into BMenu with the scrollers as children of the menu instead of as children of the BScroller class.
Rebase changes on top of master
Deskbar scrolling works for the most part, just need to fix the
bottom arrow and clean up a bit.
* Before, you had to have both, the text view layout item, and the label
layout item or else nothing would ever be visible.
* Now you can only create the text view item, and it will still work.
* Also, no matter the order you added the layout items, they would always
put the label on the left, and the control to the right.
* You can place the label and text view layout items anywhere now, although
you should keep in mind that the view spans over their frame unions; IOW
they should always adjacent to each other, but not necessarily horizontally
and left to right.
* No longer uses a fixed label spacing, but utilizes
BControlLook::DefaultLabelSpacing() instead.
* However, the spacing is always added to the right of the label, no matter
how you place it in the layout. Maybe one wants to add a SetLabelTextViewGap()
like method.