On Tue, 2012-08-21 at 12:50 +0100, Michael Meeks wrote:
Do we have a "GtkFixed" style back-compat hack that will continue to
nail widgets into their places, but do it in TWIPS such that we could do
a one-shot conversion of everything and then iterate ? [ then let the
designers re-work them incrementally ].
Planned something of that nature, in parallel with converter utility
thing. i.e. have converter do the simplest conversion possible to a
GtkGrid rather than guess/assign some layout.
[*] maybe the cast-happy syntax looks a bit vile.
In my experience it is remarkably common for
even programmers to tweak the XML and rename / loose widgets in such a
way that the code crashes later ;-)
Yeah, maybe's kendy's suggestion might be the way to go, make it a build
time problem.
Anyhow - I'm rather excited about this - it looks insanely cool :-) are
there any notable blockers stopping us getting it into master ?
a) I'm working on a windows install to make sure it doesn't fall over
and die under windows immediately
b) print dialog looks "busted", so some change has screwed that over.
c) I need to stick my notes on the wiki
So, here's a nagging concern of my own, not big enough to bother me
greatly, but I haven't measured the size of increase due to the xml .ui
files vs the size of reduction of the binary resource format. I presume
that the .ui format is bigger, though its possible that the
trivially-simple xml format I'm using for just the translations that
maps to the single always-there en-US .ui file vs the full resource copy
of the binary scheme offsets that a bit.
C.
Context
Privacy Policy |
Impressum (Legal Info) |
Copyright information: Unless otherwise specified, all text and images
on this website are licensed under the
Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 License.
This does not include the source code of LibreOffice, which is
licensed under the Mozilla Public License (
MPLv2).
"LibreOffice" and "The Document Foundation" are
registered trademarks of their corresponding registered owners or are
in actual use as trademarks in one or more countries. Their respective
logos and icons are also subject to international copyright laws. Use
thereof is explained in our
trademark policy.