efl/src/lib/elementary/elm_photocam_legacy.h

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typedef Eo Elm_Photocam;
/**
* @brief Add a new Photocam object
*
* @param parent The parent object
* @return The new object or NULL if it cannot be created
*
* @ingroup Elm_Photocam_Group
*/
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API Evas_Object *elm_photocam_add(Evas_Object *parent);
/**
* @brief Bring in the viewed portion of the image
*
* @param obj The photocam object
* @param x X-coordinate of region in image original pixels
* @param y Y-coordinate of region in image original pixels
* @param w Width of region in image original pixels
* @param h Height of region in image original pixels
*
* This shows the region of the image using animation.
*
* @ingroup Elm_Photocam_Group
*/
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API void elm_photocam_image_region_bring_in(Evas_Object *obj, int x, int y, int w, int h);
/**
*
* @brief Set the photo file to be shown
*
* @return The return error (see EVAS_LOAD_ERROR_NONE, EVAS_LOAD_ERROR_GENERIC etc.)
*
* This sets (and shows) the specified file (with a relative or absolute
* path) and will return a load error (same error that
* evas_object_image_load_error_get() will return). The image will change and
* adjust its size at this point and begin a background load process for this
* photo that at some time in the future will be displayed at the full
* quality needed.
*
* @ingroup Elm_Photocam_Group
*
* @param[in] file The photo file
*/
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API Evas_Load_Error elm_photocam_file_set(Evas_Object *obj, const char *file);
/**
*
* @brief Returns the path of the current image file
*
* @return Returns the path
*
* @see elm_photocam_file_set()
*
* @ingroup Elm_Photocam_Group
*
*/
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API const char *elm_photocam_file_get(const Evas_Object *obj);
/**
* @brief Set the photocam image orientation.
*
* This function allows to rotate or flip the photocam image.
*
* @param[in] orient The photocam image orientation @ref Evas_Image_Orient.
* Default is #EVAS_IMAGE_ORIENT_NONE.
*
* @since 1.14
*
* @ingroup Elm_Photocam_Group
*/
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API void elm_photocam_image_orient_set(Evas_Object *obj, Evas_Image_Orient orient);
/**
* @brief Get the photocam image orientation.
*
* @return The photocam image orientation @ref Evas_Image_Orient. Default is
* #EVAS_IMAGE_ORIENT_NONE.
*
* @since 1.14
*
* @ingroup Elm_Photocam_Group
*/
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API Evas_Image_Orient elm_photocam_image_orient_get(const Evas_Object *obj);
/**
* @brief Get the internal low-res image used for photocam
*
* This gets the internal image object inside photocam. Do not modify it. It is
* for inspection only, and hooking callbacks to. Nothing else. It may be
* deleted at any time as well.
*
* @return The internal image object handle or @c null
*
* @ingroup Elm_Photocam_Group
*/
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API Evas_Object* elm_photocam_internal_image_get(const Evas_Object *obj);
/**
* @brief Set the viewed region of the image
*
* This shows the region of the image without using animation.
*
* @param[in] x X-coordinate of region in image original pixels
* @param[in] y Y-coordinate of region in image original pixels
* @param[in] w Width of region in image original pixels
* @param[in] h Height of region in image original pixels
*
* @ingroup Elm_Photocam_Group
*/
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API void elm_photocam_image_region_show(Evas_Object *obj, int x, int y, int w, int h);
/**
* @brief Get the current image pixel width and height
*
* This gets the current photo pixel width and height (for the original). The
* size will be returned in the integers @c w and @c h that are pointed to.
*
* @param[out] w A pointer to the width return
* @param[out] h A pointer to the height return
*
* @ingroup Elm_Photocam_Group
*/
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API void elm_photocam_image_size_get(const Evas_Object *obj, int *w, int *h);
/**
* @brief Get the paused state for photocam
*
* This gets the current paused state for the photocam object.
*
* @return The pause state.
*
* @ingroup Elm_Photocam_Group
*/
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API Eina_Bool elm_photocam_paused_get(const Evas_Object *obj);
/**
* @brief Set the paused state for photocam
*
* This sets the paused state to on or off for photocam. The default is off.
* This will stop zooming using animation on zoom level changes and change
* instantly. This will stop any existing animations that are running.
*
* @param[in] paused The pause state.
*
* @ingroup Elm_Photocam_Group
*/
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API void elm_photocam_paused_set(Evas_Object *obj, Eina_Bool paused);
/**
* @brief Set the zoom level of the photo
*
* This sets the zoom level. If @c zoom is 1, it means no zoom. If it's smaller
* than 1, it means zoom in. If it's bigger than 1, it means zoom out. For
* example, @c zoom 1 will be 1:1 pixel for pixel. @c zoom 2 will be 2:1 (that
* is 2x2 photo pixels will display as 1 on-screen pixel) which is a zoom out.
* 4:1 will be 4x4 photo pixels as 1 screen pixel, and so on. The @c zoom
* parameter must be greater than 0. It is suggested to stick to powers of 2.
* (1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, etc.).
*
* @param[in] zoom The zoom level to set
*
* @ingroup Elm_Photocam_Group
*/
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API void elm_photocam_zoom_set(Evas_Object *obj, double zoom);
/**
* @brief Get the zoom level of the photo
*
* This returns the current zoom level of the photocam object. Note that if you
* set the fill mode to other than #ELM_PHOTOCAM_ZOOM_MODE_MANUAL (which is the
* default), the zoom level may be changed at any time by the photocam object
* itself to account for photo size and photocam viewport size.
*
* @return The zoom level to set
*
* @ingroup Elm_Photocam_Group
*/
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API double elm_photocam_zoom_get(const Evas_Object *obj);
typedef enum
{
ELM_PHOTOCAM_ZOOM_MODE_MANUAL = 0, /**< Zoom controlled normally by elm_photocam_zoom_set */
ELM_PHOTOCAM_ZOOM_MODE_AUTO_FIT, /**< Zoom until photo fits in zoomable object */
ELM_PHOTOCAM_ZOOM_MODE_AUTO_FILL, /**< Zoom until photo fills zoomable object */
ELM_PHOTOCAM_ZOOM_MODE_AUTO_FIT_IN, /**< Zoom in until photo fits in zoomable object
*/
ELM_PHOTOCAM_ZOOM_MODE_LAST /**< Sentinel value to indicate last enum field during
* iteration */
} Elm_Photocam_Zoom_Mode;
/**
* @brief Set the zoom mode
*
* This sets the zoom mode to manual or one of several automatic levels. Manual
* (ELM_PHOTOCAM_ZOOM_MODE_MANUAL) means that zoom is set manually by
* @ref elm_photocam_zoom_mode_set and will stay at that level until changed by
* code or until zoom mode is changed. This is the default mode. The Automatic
* modes will allow the photocam object to automatically adjust zoom mode based
* on properties.
*
* #ELM_PHOTOCAM_ZOOM_MODE_AUTO_FIT) will adjust zoom so the photo fits EXACTLY
* inside the scroll frame with no pixels outside this region.
* #ELM_PHOTOCAM_ZOOM_MODE_AUTO_FILL will be similar but ensure no pixels
* within the frame are left unfilled.
*
* @param[in] mode The zoom mode.
*
* @ingroup Elm_Photocam_Group
*/
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API void elm_photocam_zoom_mode_set(Evas_Object *obj, Elm_Photocam_Zoom_Mode mode);
/**
* @brief Get the zoom mode
*
* This gets the current zoom mode of the photocam object.
*
* @return The zoom mode.
*
* @ingroup Elm_Photocam_Group
*/
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API Elm_Photocam_Zoom_Mode elm_photocam_zoom_mode_get(const Evas_Object *obj);
/**
* @brief Get the region of the image that is currently shown
*
* See also @ref Efl.Ui.Image_Zoomable.image_region.set.
*
* @param[out] x X-coordinate of region in image original pixels
* @param[out] y Y-coordinate of region in image original pixels
* @param[out] w Width of region in image original pixels
* @param[out] h Height of region in image original pixels
*/
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API void elm_photocam_image_region_get(const Evas_Object *obj, int *x, int *y, int *w, int *h);
#include "efl_ui_image_zoomable_eo.legacy.h"