Using double precision for gradient extreme objects ensures that they
are preserved as specified when constructing the gradient pattern.
Fixes huge-linear, huge-radial.
Fixes part of https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=32215
Path are always interpreted in forward direction, so the ability of
interpreting in the opposite direction (which is very unlikely to be
useful at all) can be removed.
I updated the Free Software Foundation address using the following script.
for i in $(git grep Temple | cut -d: -f1 )
do
sed -e 's/59 Temple Place[, -]* Suite 330, Boston, MA *02111-1307[, ]* USA/51 Franklin Street, Suite 500, Boston, MA 02110-1335, USA/' -i "$i"
done
Fixes http://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=21356
We were exposing the actual value of CAIRO_FORMAT_INVALID
through API functions already, so it makes sense to just
go ahead and put it in the cairo_format_t enum.
The device is a generic method for accessing the underlying interface
with the native graphics subsystem, typically the X connection or
perhaps the GL context. By exposing a cairo_device_t on a surface and
its various methods we enable finer control over interoperability with
external interactions of the device by applications. The use case in
mind is, for example, a multi-threaded gstreamer which needs to serialise
its own direct access to the device along with Cairo's across many
threads.
Secondly, the cairo_device_t is a unifying API for the mismash of
backend specific methods for controlling creation of surfaces with
explicit devices and a convenient hook for debugging and introspection.
The principal components of the API are the memory management of:
cairo_device_reference(),
cairo_device_finish() and
cairo_device_destroy();
along with a pair of routines for serialising interaction:
cairo_device_acquire() and
cairo_device_release()
and a method to flush any outstanding accesses:
cairo_device_flush().
The device for a particular surface may be retrieved using:
cairo_surface_get_device().
The device returned is owned by the surface.
As a simple step to ensure that we do not inadvertently modify (or at least
generate compiler warns if we try) user data, mark the incoming style
and matrices as constant.
Replaying a meta surface can be achieved by using it as a source for a
cairo_paint() so exporting a separate API is unnecesary and confusing.
So after consulting Chris and Carl, we decided to remove the function
again.
A very simple surface that produces a hierarchical DAG in a simple XML
format. It is intended to be used whilst debugging, for example with the
automatic regression finding tools of cairo-sphinx, and with test suites
that just want to verify that their code made a particular Cairo call.