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flightgear/src/Model/panelnode.hxx

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#ifndef FG_PANELNODE_HXX
#define FG_PANELNODE_HXX
Modified Files: configure.ac src/AIModel/AIAircraft.cxx src/AIModel/AIBase.cxx src/AIModel/AIBase.hxx src/AIModel/AICarrier.cxx src/AIModel/AICarrier.hxx src/AIModel/AIManager.cxx src/AIModel/AIManager.hxx src/ATC/AIEntity.cxx src/ATC/AIEntity.hxx src/ATC/AIMgr.cxx src/ATC/AIMgr.hxx src/ATC/ATCdisplay.cxx src/ATC/ATCdisplay.hxx src/Cockpit/cockpit.cxx src/Cockpit/cockpit.hxx src/Cockpit/hud.cxx src/Cockpit/hud.hxx src/Cockpit/hud_rwy.cxx src/Cockpit/panel.cxx src/Cockpit/panel.hxx src/Cockpit/built_in/FGMagRibbon.cxx src/Cockpit/built_in/FGMagRibbon.hxx src/FDM/flight.cxx src/FDM/groundcache.cxx src/FDM/groundcache.hxx src/GUI/gui_funcs.cxx src/Input/input.cxx src/Instrumentation/od_gauge.cxx src/Instrumentation/od_gauge.hxx src/Instrumentation/render_area_2d.cxx src/Instrumentation/render_area_2d.hxx src/Instrumentation/wxradar.cxx src/Instrumentation/wxradar.hxx src/Instrumentation/HUD/HUD.cxx src/Instrumentation/HUD/HUD.hxx src/Instrumentation/HUD/HUD_runway.cxx src/Main/Makefile.am src/Main/main.cxx src/Main/renderer.cxx src/Main/renderer.hxx src/Main/viewmgr.cxx src/Model/acmodel.cxx src/Model/acmodel.hxx src/Model/model_panel.cxx src/Model/model_panel.hxx src/Model/modelmgr.cxx src/Model/modelmgr.hxx src/Model/panelnode.cxx src/Model/panelnode.hxx src/Navaids/awynet.cxx src/Scenery/Makefile.am src/Scenery/hitlist.cxx src/Scenery/hitlist.hxx src/Scenery/newcache.cxx src/Scenery/scenery.cxx src/Scenery/scenery.hxx src/Scenery/tileentry.cxx src/Scenery/tileentry.hxx src/Scenery/tilemgr.cxx src/Scripting/NasalSys.cxx src/Scripting/NasalSys.hxx src/Time/light.cxx Big BLOB on the way to OSG.
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#include <osg/Vec3>
#include <osg/Matrix>
#include <osg/Drawable>
#include <osg/Version>
#include <memory>
#include <simgear/structure/SGSharedPtr.hxx>
#include <simgear/props/props.hxx>
3D panel support from Andy Ross: + The panel(s) are now an first-class SSG node inside the aircraft scene graph. There's a little code added to model.cxx to handle the parsing, but most of the changes are inside the new FGPanelNode class (Model/panelnode.[ch]xx). + The old FGPanel source changed a lot, but mostly cosmetically. The virtual-cockpit code moved out into FGPanelNode, and the core rendering has been abstracted into a draw() method that doesn't try to set any OpenGL state. I also replaced the old inter-layer offset code with glPolygonOffset, as calculating the right Z values is hard across the funky modelview matrix I need to use. The older virtual panel code got away with it by disabling depth test, thus the "panel draws on top of yoke" bug. PolygonOffset is really the appropriate solution for this sort of task anyway. + The /sim/virtual-cockpit property is no more. The 2D panels are still specified in the -set.xml file, but 3D panels are part of the model file. + You can have as many 3D panels as you like. Problems: + The mouse support isn't ready yet, so the 3D panels still aren't interactive. Soon to come. + Being part of the same scene graph as the model, the 3D panels now "jitter" in exactly the same way. While this makes the jitter of the attitude gyro less noticeable, it's still *very* noticeable and annoying. I looked hard for this, and am at this point convinced that the problem is with the two orientation computations. We have one in FGLocation that is used by the model code, and one in FGViewer that is used at the top of the scene graph. My suspicion is that they don't agree exactly, so the final orientation matrix is the right answer plus the difference. I did rule out the FDMs though. None of them show more than about 0.0001 degree of orientation change between frames for a stopped aircraft. That's within an order of magnitude of what you'd expect for the orientation change due to the rotation of the earth (which we don't model -- I cite it only as evidence of how small this is); far, far less than one pixel on the screen. [and later] OK, this is fixed by the attached panel.cxx file. What's happened is that the winding order for the text layer's polygons is wrong, so I reverse it before drawing. That's largely a hatchet job to make things work for now, though. We should figure out why the winding order is wrong for only text layers and fix it. I checked the plib sources -- they're definitely doing things CCW, as is all the rest of the panel code. Odd. I'm also not sure why the 2D panel doesn't care (it works in both winding orders). But this will allow you to check in working code, anyway. There's a big comment to this effect in there.
2002-06-28 14:17:40 +00:00
class FGPanel;
class SGPropertyNode;
// PanelNode defines an OSG drawable wrapping the 2D panel drawing code
3D panel support from Andy Ross: + The panel(s) are now an first-class SSG node inside the aircraft scene graph. There's a little code added to model.cxx to handle the parsing, but most of the changes are inside the new FGPanelNode class (Model/panelnode.[ch]xx). + The old FGPanel source changed a lot, but mostly cosmetically. The virtual-cockpit code moved out into FGPanelNode, and the core rendering has been abstracted into a draw() method that doesn't try to set any OpenGL state. I also replaced the old inter-layer offset code with glPolygonOffset, as calculating the right Z values is hard across the funky modelview matrix I need to use. The older virtual panel code got away with it by disabling depth test, thus the "panel draws on top of yoke" bug. PolygonOffset is really the appropriate solution for this sort of task anyway. + The /sim/virtual-cockpit property is no more. The 2D panels are still specified in the -set.xml file, but 3D panels are part of the model file. + You can have as many 3D panels as you like. Problems: + The mouse support isn't ready yet, so the 3D panels still aren't interactive. Soon to come. + Being part of the same scene graph as the model, the 3D panels now "jitter" in exactly the same way. While this makes the jitter of the attitude gyro less noticeable, it's still *very* noticeable and annoying. I looked hard for this, and am at this point convinced that the problem is with the two orientation computations. We have one in FGLocation that is used by the model code, and one in FGViewer that is used at the top of the scene graph. My suspicion is that they don't agree exactly, so the final orientation matrix is the right answer plus the difference. I did rule out the FDMs though. None of them show more than about 0.0001 degree of orientation change between frames for a stopped aircraft. That's within an order of magnitude of what you'd expect for the orientation change due to the rotation of the earth (which we don't model -- I cite it only as evidence of how small this is); far, far less than one pixel on the screen. [and later] OK, this is fixed by the attached panel.cxx file. What's happened is that the winding order for the text layer's polygons is wrong, so I reverse it before drawing. That's largely a hatchet job to make things work for now, though. We should figure out why the winding order is wrong for only text layers and fix it. I checked the plib sources -- they're definitely doing things CCW, as is all the rest of the panel code. Odd. I'm also not sure why the 2D panel doesn't care (it works in both winding orders). But this will allow you to check in working code, anyway. There's a big comment to this effect in there.
2002-06-28 14:17:40 +00:00
class FGPanelNode : public osg::Drawable
3D panel support from Andy Ross: + The panel(s) are now an first-class SSG node inside the aircraft scene graph. There's a little code added to model.cxx to handle the parsing, but most of the changes are inside the new FGPanelNode class (Model/panelnode.[ch]xx). + The old FGPanel source changed a lot, but mostly cosmetically. The virtual-cockpit code moved out into FGPanelNode, and the core rendering has been abstracted into a draw() method that doesn't try to set any OpenGL state. I also replaced the old inter-layer offset code with glPolygonOffset, as calculating the right Z values is hard across the funky modelview matrix I need to use. The older virtual panel code got away with it by disabling depth test, thus the "panel draws on top of yoke" bug. PolygonOffset is really the appropriate solution for this sort of task anyway. + The /sim/virtual-cockpit property is no more. The 2D panels are still specified in the -set.xml file, but 3D panels are part of the model file. + You can have as many 3D panels as you like. Problems: + The mouse support isn't ready yet, so the 3D panels still aren't interactive. Soon to come. + Being part of the same scene graph as the model, the 3D panels now "jitter" in exactly the same way. While this makes the jitter of the attitude gyro less noticeable, it's still *very* noticeable and annoying. I looked hard for this, and am at this point convinced that the problem is with the two orientation computations. We have one in FGLocation that is used by the model code, and one in FGViewer that is used at the top of the scene graph. My suspicion is that they don't agree exactly, so the final orientation matrix is the right answer plus the difference. I did rule out the FDMs though. None of them show more than about 0.0001 degree of orientation change between frames for a stopped aircraft. That's within an order of magnitude of what you'd expect for the orientation change due to the rotation of the earth (which we don't model -- I cite it only as evidence of how small this is); far, far less than one pixel on the screen. [and later] OK, this is fixed by the attached panel.cxx file. What's happened is that the winding order for the text layer's polygons is wrong, so I reverse it before drawing. That's largely a hatchet job to make things work for now, though. We should figure out why the winding order is wrong for only text layers and fix it. I checked the plib sources -- they're definitely doing things CCW, as is all the rest of the panel code. Odd. I'm also not sure why the 2D panel doesn't care (it works in both winding orders). But this will allow you to check in working code, anyway. There's a big comment to this effect in there.
2002-06-28 14:17:40 +00:00
{
public:
3D panel support from Andy Ross: + The panel(s) are now an first-class SSG node inside the aircraft scene graph. There's a little code added to model.cxx to handle the parsing, but most of the changes are inside the new FGPanelNode class (Model/panelnode.[ch]xx). + The old FGPanel source changed a lot, but mostly cosmetically. The virtual-cockpit code moved out into FGPanelNode, and the core rendering has been abstracted into a draw() method that doesn't try to set any OpenGL state. I also replaced the old inter-layer offset code with glPolygonOffset, as calculating the right Z values is hard across the funky modelview matrix I need to use. The older virtual panel code got away with it by disabling depth test, thus the "panel draws on top of yoke" bug. PolygonOffset is really the appropriate solution for this sort of task anyway. + The /sim/virtual-cockpit property is no more. The 2D panels are still specified in the -set.xml file, but 3D panels are part of the model file. + You can have as many 3D panels as you like. Problems: + The mouse support isn't ready yet, so the 3D panels still aren't interactive. Soon to come. + Being part of the same scene graph as the model, the 3D panels now "jitter" in exactly the same way. While this makes the jitter of the attitude gyro less noticeable, it's still *very* noticeable and annoying. I looked hard for this, and am at this point convinced that the problem is with the two orientation computations. We have one in FGLocation that is used by the model code, and one in FGViewer that is used at the top of the scene graph. My suspicion is that they don't agree exactly, so the final orientation matrix is the right answer plus the difference. I did rule out the FDMs though. None of them show more than about 0.0001 degree of orientation change between frames for a stopped aircraft. That's within an order of magnitude of what you'd expect for the orientation change due to the rotation of the earth (which we don't model -- I cite it only as evidence of how small this is); far, far less than one pixel on the screen. [and later] OK, this is fixed by the attached panel.cxx file. What's happened is that the winding order for the text layer's polygons is wrong, so I reverse it before drawing. That's largely a hatchet job to make things work for now, though. We should figure out why the winding order is wrong for only text layers and fix it. I checked the plib sources -- they're definitely doing things CCW, as is all the rest of the panel code. Odd. I'm also not sure why the 2D panel doesn't care (it works in both winding orders). But this will allow you to check in working code, anyway. There's a big comment to this effect in there.
2002-06-28 14:17:40 +00:00
FGPanelNode(SGPropertyNode* props);
virtual ~FGPanelNode();
Modified Files: configure.ac src/AIModel/AIAircraft.cxx src/AIModel/AIBase.cxx src/AIModel/AIBase.hxx src/AIModel/AICarrier.cxx src/AIModel/AICarrier.hxx src/AIModel/AIManager.cxx src/AIModel/AIManager.hxx src/ATC/AIEntity.cxx src/ATC/AIEntity.hxx src/ATC/AIMgr.cxx src/ATC/AIMgr.hxx src/ATC/ATCdisplay.cxx src/ATC/ATCdisplay.hxx src/Cockpit/cockpit.cxx src/Cockpit/cockpit.hxx src/Cockpit/hud.cxx src/Cockpit/hud.hxx src/Cockpit/hud_rwy.cxx src/Cockpit/panel.cxx src/Cockpit/panel.hxx src/Cockpit/built_in/FGMagRibbon.cxx src/Cockpit/built_in/FGMagRibbon.hxx src/FDM/flight.cxx src/FDM/groundcache.cxx src/FDM/groundcache.hxx src/GUI/gui_funcs.cxx src/Input/input.cxx src/Instrumentation/od_gauge.cxx src/Instrumentation/od_gauge.hxx src/Instrumentation/render_area_2d.cxx src/Instrumentation/render_area_2d.hxx src/Instrumentation/wxradar.cxx src/Instrumentation/wxradar.hxx src/Instrumentation/HUD/HUD.cxx src/Instrumentation/HUD/HUD.hxx src/Instrumentation/HUD/HUD_runway.cxx src/Main/Makefile.am src/Main/main.cxx src/Main/renderer.cxx src/Main/renderer.hxx src/Main/viewmgr.cxx src/Model/acmodel.cxx src/Model/acmodel.hxx src/Model/model_panel.cxx src/Model/model_panel.hxx src/Model/modelmgr.cxx src/Model/modelmgr.hxx src/Model/panelnode.cxx src/Model/panelnode.hxx src/Navaids/awynet.cxx src/Scenery/Makefile.am src/Scenery/hitlist.cxx src/Scenery/hitlist.hxx src/Scenery/newcache.cxx src/Scenery/scenery.cxx src/Scenery/scenery.hxx src/Scenery/tileentry.cxx src/Scenery/tileentry.hxx src/Scenery/tilemgr.cxx src/Scripting/NasalSys.cxx src/Scripting/NasalSys.hxx src/Time/light.cxx Big BLOB on the way to OSG.
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// OSGFIXME
virtual osg::Object* cloneType() const { return 0; }
virtual osg::Object* clone(const osg::CopyOp& copyop) const { return 0; }
2002-10-29 19:44:03 +00:00
FGPanel* getPanel() { return _panel; }
3D panel support from Andy Ross: + The panel(s) are now an first-class SSG node inside the aircraft scene graph. There's a little code added to model.cxx to handle the parsing, but most of the changes are inside the new FGPanelNode class (Model/panelnode.[ch]xx). + The old FGPanel source changed a lot, but mostly cosmetically. The virtual-cockpit code moved out into FGPanelNode, and the core rendering has been abstracted into a draw() method that doesn't try to set any OpenGL state. I also replaced the old inter-layer offset code with glPolygonOffset, as calculating the right Z values is hard across the funky modelview matrix I need to use. The older virtual panel code got away with it by disabling depth test, thus the "panel draws on top of yoke" bug. PolygonOffset is really the appropriate solution for this sort of task anyway. + The /sim/virtual-cockpit property is no more. The 2D panels are still specified in the -set.xml file, but 3D panels are part of the model file. + You can have as many 3D panels as you like. Problems: + The mouse support isn't ready yet, so the 3D panels still aren't interactive. Soon to come. + Being part of the same scene graph as the model, the 3D panels now "jitter" in exactly the same way. While this makes the jitter of the attitude gyro less noticeable, it's still *very* noticeable and annoying. I looked hard for this, and am at this point convinced that the problem is with the two orientation computations. We have one in FGLocation that is used by the model code, and one in FGViewer that is used at the top of the scene graph. My suspicion is that they don't agree exactly, so the final orientation matrix is the right answer plus the difference. I did rule out the FDMs though. None of them show more than about 0.0001 degree of orientation change between frames for a stopped aircraft. That's within an order of magnitude of what you'd expect for the orientation change due to the rotation of the earth (which we don't model -- I cite it only as evidence of how small this is); far, far less than one pixel on the screen. [and later] OK, this is fixed by the attached panel.cxx file. What's happened is that the winding order for the text layer's polygons is wrong, so I reverse it before drawing. That's largely a hatchet job to make things work for now, though. We should figure out why the winding order is wrong for only text layers and fix it. I checked the plib sources -- they're definitely doing things CCW, as is all the rest of the panel code. Odd. I'm also not sure why the 2D panel doesn't care (it works in both winding orders). But this will allow you to check in working code, anyway. There's a big comment to this effect in there.
2002-06-28 14:17:40 +00:00
virtual void drawImplementation(osg::RenderInfo& renderInfo) const
{ drawImplementation(*renderInfo.getState()); }
void drawImplementation(osg::State& state) const;
2020-06-18 16:25:01 +00:00
osg::BoundingBox computeBoundingBox() const override;
3D panel support from Andy Ross: + The panel(s) are now an first-class SSG node inside the aircraft scene graph. There's a little code added to model.cxx to handle the parsing, but most of the changes are inside the new FGPanelNode class (Model/panelnode.[ch]xx). + The old FGPanel source changed a lot, but mostly cosmetically. The virtual-cockpit code moved out into FGPanelNode, and the core rendering has been abstracted into a draw() method that doesn't try to set any OpenGL state. I also replaced the old inter-layer offset code with glPolygonOffset, as calculating the right Z values is hard across the funky modelview matrix I need to use. The older virtual panel code got away with it by disabling depth test, thus the "panel draws on top of yoke" bug. PolygonOffset is really the appropriate solution for this sort of task anyway. + The /sim/virtual-cockpit property is no more. The 2D panels are still specified in the -set.xml file, but 3D panels are part of the model file. + You can have as many 3D panels as you like. Problems: + The mouse support isn't ready yet, so the 3D panels still aren't interactive. Soon to come. + Being part of the same scene graph as the model, the 3D panels now "jitter" in exactly the same way. While this makes the jitter of the attitude gyro less noticeable, it's still *very* noticeable and annoying. I looked hard for this, and am at this point convinced that the problem is with the two orientation computations. We have one in FGLocation that is used by the model code, and one in FGViewer that is used at the top of the scene graph. My suspicion is that they don't agree exactly, so the final orientation matrix is the right answer plus the difference. I did rule out the FDMs though. None of them show more than about 0.0001 degree of orientation change between frames for a stopped aircraft. That's within an order of magnitude of what you'd expect for the orientation change due to the rotation of the earth (which we don't model -- I cite it only as evidence of how small this is); far, far less than one pixel on the screen. [and later] OK, this is fixed by the attached panel.cxx file. What's happened is that the winding order for the text layer's polygons is wrong, so I reverse it before drawing. That's largely a hatchet job to make things work for now, though. We should figure out why the winding order is wrong for only text layers and fix it. I checked the plib sources -- they're definitely doing things CCW, as is all the rest of the panel code. Odd. I'm also not sure why the 2D panel doesn't care (it works in both winding orders). But this will allow you to check in working code, anyway. There's a big comment to this effect in there.
2002-06-28 14:17:40 +00:00
/** Return true, FGPanelNode does support accept(PrimitiveFunctor&). */
virtual bool supports(const osg::PrimitiveFunctor&) const { return true; }
virtual void accept(osg::PrimitiveFunctor& functor) const;
static osg::Node* load(SGPropertyNode *n);
static osg::Node* create2DPanelNode();
osg::Matrix transformMatrix() const;
void setPanelPath(const std::string& panel);
void lazyLoad();
/**
* is visible in 2D mode or not?
*/
bool isVisible2d() const;
3D panel support from Andy Ross: + The panel(s) are now an first-class SSG node inside the aircraft scene graph. There's a little code added to model.cxx to handle the parsing, but most of the changes are inside the new FGPanelNode class (Model/panelnode.[ch]xx). + The old FGPanel source changed a lot, but mostly cosmetically. The virtual-cockpit code moved out into FGPanelNode, and the core rendering has been abstracted into a draw() method that doesn't try to set any OpenGL state. I also replaced the old inter-layer offset code with glPolygonOffset, as calculating the right Z values is hard across the funky modelview matrix I need to use. The older virtual panel code got away with it by disabling depth test, thus the "panel draws on top of yoke" bug. PolygonOffset is really the appropriate solution for this sort of task anyway. + The /sim/virtual-cockpit property is no more. The 2D panels are still specified in the -set.xml file, but 3D panels are part of the model file. + You can have as many 3D panels as you like. Problems: + The mouse support isn't ready yet, so the 3D panels still aren't interactive. Soon to come. + Being part of the same scene graph as the model, the 3D panels now "jitter" in exactly the same way. While this makes the jitter of the attitude gyro less noticeable, it's still *very* noticeable and annoying. I looked hard for this, and am at this point convinced that the problem is with the two orientation computations. We have one in FGLocation that is used by the model code, and one in FGViewer that is used at the top of the scene graph. My suspicion is that they don't agree exactly, so the final orientation matrix is the right answer plus the difference. I did rule out the FDMs though. None of them show more than about 0.0001 degree of orientation change between frames for a stopped aircraft. That's within an order of magnitude of what you'd expect for the orientation change due to the rotation of the earth (which we don't model -- I cite it only as evidence of how small this is); far, far less than one pixel on the screen. [and later] OK, this is fixed by the attached panel.cxx file. What's happened is that the winding order for the text layer's polygons is wrong, so I reverse it before drawing. That's largely a hatchet job to make things work for now, though. We should figure out why the winding order is wrong for only text layers and fix it. I checked the plib sources -- they're definitely doing things CCW, as is all the rest of the panel code. Odd. I'm also not sure why the 2D panel doesn't care (it works in both winding orders). But this will allow you to check in working code, anyway. There's a big comment to this effect in there.
2002-06-28 14:17:40 +00:00
private:
FGPanelNode(); // for 2D panels
void commonInit();
void initWithPanel();
bool panelMouseClickCommand(const SGPropertyNode * arg, SGPropertyNode * root);
const bool _is2d;
SGSharedPtr<FGPanel> _panel;
std::string _panelPath;
bool _resizeToViewport;
bool _depthTest;
3D panel support from Andy Ross: + The panel(s) are now an first-class SSG node inside the aircraft scene graph. There's a little code added to model.cxx to handle the parsing, but most of the changes are inside the new FGPanelNode class (Model/panelnode.[ch]xx). + The old FGPanel source changed a lot, but mostly cosmetically. The virtual-cockpit code moved out into FGPanelNode, and the core rendering has been abstracted into a draw() method that doesn't try to set any OpenGL state. I also replaced the old inter-layer offset code with glPolygonOffset, as calculating the right Z values is hard across the funky modelview matrix I need to use. The older virtual panel code got away with it by disabling depth test, thus the "panel draws on top of yoke" bug. PolygonOffset is really the appropriate solution for this sort of task anyway. + The /sim/virtual-cockpit property is no more. The 2D panels are still specified in the -set.xml file, but 3D panels are part of the model file. + You can have as many 3D panels as you like. Problems: + The mouse support isn't ready yet, so the 3D panels still aren't interactive. Soon to come. + Being part of the same scene graph as the model, the 3D panels now "jitter" in exactly the same way. While this makes the jitter of the attitude gyro less noticeable, it's still *very* noticeable and annoying. I looked hard for this, and am at this point convinced that the problem is with the two orientation computations. We have one in FGLocation that is used by the model code, and one in FGViewer that is used at the top of the scene graph. My suspicion is that they don't agree exactly, so the final orientation matrix is the right answer plus the difference. I did rule out the FDMs though. None of them show more than about 0.0001 degree of orientation change between frames for a stopped aircraft. That's within an order of magnitude of what you'd expect for the orientation change due to the rotation of the earth (which we don't model -- I cite it only as evidence of how small this is); far, far less than one pixel on the screen. [and later] OK, this is fixed by the attached panel.cxx file. What's happened is that the winding order for the text layer's polygons is wrong, so I reverse it before drawing. That's largely a hatchet job to make things work for now, though. We should figure out why the winding order is wrong for only text layers and fix it. I checked the plib sources -- they're definitely doing things CCW, as is all the rest of the panel code. Odd. I'm also not sure why the 2D panel doesn't care (it works in both winding orders). But this will allow you to check in working code, anyway. There's a big comment to this effect in there.
2002-06-28 14:17:40 +00:00
// Panel corner coordinates
Modified Files: configure.ac src/AIModel/AIAircraft.cxx src/AIModel/AIBase.cxx src/AIModel/AIBase.hxx src/AIModel/AICarrier.cxx src/AIModel/AICarrier.hxx src/AIModel/AIManager.cxx src/AIModel/AIManager.hxx src/ATC/AIEntity.cxx src/ATC/AIEntity.hxx src/ATC/AIMgr.cxx src/ATC/AIMgr.hxx src/ATC/ATCdisplay.cxx src/ATC/ATCdisplay.hxx src/Cockpit/cockpit.cxx src/Cockpit/cockpit.hxx src/Cockpit/hud.cxx src/Cockpit/hud.hxx src/Cockpit/hud_rwy.cxx src/Cockpit/panel.cxx src/Cockpit/panel.hxx src/Cockpit/built_in/FGMagRibbon.cxx src/Cockpit/built_in/FGMagRibbon.hxx src/FDM/flight.cxx src/FDM/groundcache.cxx src/FDM/groundcache.hxx src/GUI/gui_funcs.cxx src/Input/input.cxx src/Instrumentation/od_gauge.cxx src/Instrumentation/od_gauge.hxx src/Instrumentation/render_area_2d.cxx src/Instrumentation/render_area_2d.hxx src/Instrumentation/wxradar.cxx src/Instrumentation/wxradar.hxx src/Instrumentation/HUD/HUD.cxx src/Instrumentation/HUD/HUD.hxx src/Instrumentation/HUD/HUD_runway.cxx src/Main/Makefile.am src/Main/main.cxx src/Main/renderer.cxx src/Main/renderer.hxx src/Main/viewmgr.cxx src/Model/acmodel.cxx src/Model/acmodel.hxx src/Model/model_panel.cxx src/Model/model_panel.hxx src/Model/modelmgr.cxx src/Model/modelmgr.hxx src/Model/panelnode.cxx src/Model/panelnode.hxx src/Navaids/awynet.cxx src/Scenery/Makefile.am src/Scenery/hitlist.cxx src/Scenery/hitlist.hxx src/Scenery/newcache.cxx src/Scenery/scenery.cxx src/Scenery/scenery.hxx src/Scenery/tileentry.cxx src/Scenery/tileentry.hxx src/Scenery/tilemgr.cxx src/Scripting/NasalSys.cxx src/Scripting/NasalSys.hxx src/Time/light.cxx Big BLOB on the way to OSG.
2006-10-29 19:30:21 +00:00
osg::Vec3 _bottomLeft, _topLeft, _bottomRight;
3D panel support from Andy Ross: + The panel(s) are now an first-class SSG node inside the aircraft scene graph. There's a little code added to model.cxx to handle the parsing, but most of the changes are inside the new FGPanelNode class (Model/panelnode.[ch]xx). + The old FGPanel source changed a lot, but mostly cosmetically. The virtual-cockpit code moved out into FGPanelNode, and the core rendering has been abstracted into a draw() method that doesn't try to set any OpenGL state. I also replaced the old inter-layer offset code with glPolygonOffset, as calculating the right Z values is hard across the funky modelview matrix I need to use. The older virtual panel code got away with it by disabling depth test, thus the "panel draws on top of yoke" bug. PolygonOffset is really the appropriate solution for this sort of task anyway. + The /sim/virtual-cockpit property is no more. The 2D panels are still specified in the -set.xml file, but 3D panels are part of the model file. + You can have as many 3D panels as you like. Problems: + The mouse support isn't ready yet, so the 3D panels still aren't interactive. Soon to come. + Being part of the same scene graph as the model, the 3D panels now "jitter" in exactly the same way. While this makes the jitter of the attitude gyro less noticeable, it's still *very* noticeable and annoying. I looked hard for this, and am at this point convinced that the problem is with the two orientation computations. We have one in FGLocation that is used by the model code, and one in FGViewer that is used at the top of the scene graph. My suspicion is that they don't agree exactly, so the final orientation matrix is the right answer plus the difference. I did rule out the FDMs though. None of them show more than about 0.0001 degree of orientation change between frames for a stopped aircraft. That's within an order of magnitude of what you'd expect for the orientation change due to the rotation of the earth (which we don't model -- I cite it only as evidence of how small this is); far, far less than one pixel on the screen. [and later] OK, this is fixed by the attached panel.cxx file. What's happened is that the winding order for the text layer's polygons is wrong, so I reverse it before drawing. That's largely a hatchet job to make things work for now, though. We should figure out why the winding order is wrong for only text layers and fix it. I checked the plib sources -- they're definitely doing things CCW, as is all the rest of the panel code. Odd. I'm also not sure why the 2D panel doesn't care (it works in both winding orders). But this will allow you to check in working code, anyway. There's a big comment to this effect in there.
2002-06-28 14:17:40 +00:00
int _xmin, _ymin, _xmax, _ymax;
3D panel support from Andy Ross: + The panel(s) are now an first-class SSG node inside the aircraft scene graph. There's a little code added to model.cxx to handle the parsing, but most of the changes are inside the new FGPanelNode class (Model/panelnode.[ch]xx). + The old FGPanel source changed a lot, but mostly cosmetically. The virtual-cockpit code moved out into FGPanelNode, and the core rendering has been abstracted into a draw() method that doesn't try to set any OpenGL state. I also replaced the old inter-layer offset code with glPolygonOffset, as calculating the right Z values is hard across the funky modelview matrix I need to use. The older virtual panel code got away with it by disabling depth test, thus the "panel draws on top of yoke" bug. PolygonOffset is really the appropriate solution for this sort of task anyway. + The /sim/virtual-cockpit property is no more. The 2D panels are still specified in the -set.xml file, but 3D panels are part of the model file. + You can have as many 3D panels as you like. Problems: + The mouse support isn't ready yet, so the 3D panels still aren't interactive. Soon to come. + Being part of the same scene graph as the model, the 3D panels now "jitter" in exactly the same way. While this makes the jitter of the attitude gyro less noticeable, it's still *very* noticeable and annoying. I looked hard for this, and am at this point convinced that the problem is with the two orientation computations. We have one in FGLocation that is used by the model code, and one in FGViewer that is used at the top of the scene graph. My suspicion is that they don't agree exactly, so the final orientation matrix is the right answer plus the difference. I did rule out the FDMs though. None of them show more than about 0.0001 degree of orientation change between frames for a stopped aircraft. That's within an order of magnitude of what you'd expect for the orientation change due to the rotation of the earth (which we don't model -- I cite it only as evidence of how small this is); far, far less than one pixel on the screen. [and later] OK, this is fixed by the attached panel.cxx file. What's happened is that the winding order for the text layer's polygons is wrong, so I reverse it before drawing. That's largely a hatchet job to make things work for now, though. We should figure out why the winding order is wrong for only text layers and fix it. I checked the plib sources -- they're definitely doing things CCW, as is all the rest of the panel code. Odd. I'm also not sure why the 2D panel doesn't care (it works in both winding orders). But this will allow you to check in working code, anyway. There's a big comment to this effect in there.
2002-06-28 14:17:40 +00:00
// The matrix that results, which transforms 2D x/y panel
// coordinates into 3D coordinates of the panel quadrilateral.
osg::Matrix _xform;
SGPropertyChangeListener* _listener;
2016-11-14 21:20:14 +00:00
std::unique_ptr<SGPropertyChangeListener> _pathListener;
/// should the 2D panel auto-hide when the view orientation changes
mutable SGPropertyNode_ptr _autoHide2d;
/// should the 2D panel be hidden in views other than the default (view 0)
mutable SGPropertyNode_ptr _hideNonDefaultViews;
3D panel support from Andy Ross: + The panel(s) are now an first-class SSG node inside the aircraft scene graph. There's a little code added to model.cxx to handle the parsing, but most of the changes are inside the new FGPanelNode class (Model/panelnode.[ch]xx). + The old FGPanel source changed a lot, but mostly cosmetically. The virtual-cockpit code moved out into FGPanelNode, and the core rendering has been abstracted into a draw() method that doesn't try to set any OpenGL state. I also replaced the old inter-layer offset code with glPolygonOffset, as calculating the right Z values is hard across the funky modelview matrix I need to use. The older virtual panel code got away with it by disabling depth test, thus the "panel draws on top of yoke" bug. PolygonOffset is really the appropriate solution for this sort of task anyway. + The /sim/virtual-cockpit property is no more. The 2D panels are still specified in the -set.xml file, but 3D panels are part of the model file. + You can have as many 3D panels as you like. Problems: + The mouse support isn't ready yet, so the 3D panels still aren't interactive. Soon to come. + Being part of the same scene graph as the model, the 3D panels now "jitter" in exactly the same way. While this makes the jitter of the attitude gyro less noticeable, it's still *very* noticeable and annoying. I looked hard for this, and am at this point convinced that the problem is with the two orientation computations. We have one in FGLocation that is used by the model code, and one in FGViewer that is used at the top of the scene graph. My suspicion is that they don't agree exactly, so the final orientation matrix is the right answer plus the difference. I did rule out the FDMs though. None of them show more than about 0.0001 degree of orientation change between frames for a stopped aircraft. That's within an order of magnitude of what you'd expect for the orientation change due to the rotation of the earth (which we don't model -- I cite it only as evidence of how small this is); far, far less than one pixel on the screen. [and later] OK, this is fixed by the attached panel.cxx file. What's happened is that the winding order for the text layer's polygons is wrong, so I reverse it before drawing. That's largely a hatchet job to make things work for now, though. We should figure out why the winding order is wrong for only text layers and fix it. I checked the plib sources -- they're definitely doing things CCW, as is all the rest of the panel code. Odd. I'm also not sure why the 2D panel doesn't care (it works in both winding orders). But this will allow you to check in working code, anyway. There's a big comment to this effect in there.
2002-06-28 14:17:40 +00:00
};
#endif // FG_PANELNODE_HXX