The freelook shortcuts now use the action system by proxy. This allows the actions system to be leveraged for input checking. When the shortcut changes, the respective action is updated.
Removes some unnecessary includes from `editor_node.h`, and instead add
those where they're used.
Removes unnecessary `editor_node.h` includes in various editor classes.
Renames `dynamicfont` to `dynamic_font` in a couple files.
Misc cleanup while jumping through that rabbit hole.
After starting an instant transform and cancelling it, the mouse was
blocked because cancel_transform did not set _edit.instant back to
false.
This refactors all the cleanup into a separate function that both
cancel_transform and commit_transform can call.
Fixes#57868.
This reverts commit 4234a72b25.
There are some errors which are problematic to have in 4.0 alpha 2.
The PR can be redone with fixes and merged again after the dev release.
Fixes#57839.
* Get rid of deadzones.
* Make it easier to select rotation handles at very oblique angles.
* Handle rotation for axes that are perpendicular to the camera.
See godotengine/godot-proposals#1215.
This adds shortcuts for blender-inspired transforms, where you can press
the key and immediately be transforming an object without holding the
mouse. Clicking commits the transformation, ESC aborts it.
This is inspired by Blender's G(rab)/R(otate)/S(cale) shortcuts, but I
decided not to add default bindings as `S` is already bound to the
regular scale tool, and it might be confusing to only bind some of them.
While actively using a transform tool, you can press X/Y/Z to lock the
transform to an axis or (shift)+X/Y/Z to constrain the transform to a
plane. These keys are only processed if you have a transform tool
(translate/rotate/scale) active _and_ the mouse button is held.
Pressing XX/YY/ZZ will lock the transform to a local (rather than
global) axis.
This is achieved by temporarily toggling the local transform button. I
did this (vs handling it in the transform functions) for 3 reasons:
- Transform logic for translate/rotate (but not scale) appears to be
tightly coupled to the gizmo
- This ensures the gizmo changes to indicate we're transforming
locally/globally
- Toggling the button state in the UI also gives the user feedback about
the nature of the transform.
The original state of the button is reset when the transform completes.
Pressing the `spatial_editor/cancel_transform` shortcut key during a
transform operation will cancel the transform and reset the objects back
to their original transforms.
This functionality was already accessible by pressing RMB during a
transform, however:
- ESC is more familiar to blender users, and a more common "cancel" key
in general.
- Given you must hold LMB during a transform, pressing RMB as well is
clumsy if not impossible (on a laptop trackpad).
Primary and secondary handles are no longer differentiated by their ids, so a bool was added to tell them apart in all the handle-related methods.
Includes a minor fix in CollisionPolygon3DEditor, unrelated to editor gizmos.
* `_gui_input`, `_input`, `_unhandled_input` and `_unhandled_key_input` are now regular C++ virutal functions.
* Everything else converted to GDVIRTUAL
* BIND_VMETHOD is gone, always use the new syntax from now on.
Creating `_gui_input` method and using the binder to register events will no longer work, simply override the virtual function now.
Benefits:
- Knows the size of the mesh to prevent push back taking longer
- No longer updates grid every frame, only if the camera has moved 10 units or more.
- Considerably less power draw
- Will redraw when you swap from orthographic to perspective and vice versa.
This makes it easier to notice that some menu items only appear when
specific nodes are selected.
This change applies to both 2D and 3D editors, including both plugin-based
menus and the hardcoded 2D layout/animation contextual menus.
* Clean-up of node_3d_editor_plugin.{h,cpp}: removed unused code, fixed some bugs.
* Moved node_3d_editor_gizmos.{h,cpp} to editor/plugins.
* Added support for multiple gizmos per node. This means custom gizmos will no longer override the built-in ones and that multiple gizmos can be used in more complex nodes.
* Added support for handle IDs. When adding handles to a gizmo, an ID can be specified for each one, making it easier to work with gizmos that have a variable number of handles.
* Added support for subgizmos, selectable elements that can be transformed without needing a node of their own. By overriding _subgizmo_intersect_frustum() and/or _subgizmo_intersect_ray() gizmos can define which subgizmos should be selected on a region or click selection. Subgizmo transformations are applied using get/set/commit virtual methods, similar to how handles work.
* there is now a more clear distinction between camera_2d and camera_3d functions in the engine code
* simplified camera2d's exported interface - now everything happens directly with the 'current' variable and make_current and clear_current are no longer exposed- there were some situations where calling one instead of set_current would result in incomplete results
* rebased to current godot master
* Removed entirely from RenderingServer.
* Replaced by ImmediateMesh resource.
* ImmediateMesh replaces ImmediateGeometry, but could use more optimization in the future.
* Sprite3D and AnimatedSprite3D work again, ported from Godot 3.x (though a lot of work was needed to adapt them to Godot 4).
* RootMotionView works again.
* Polygon3D editor works again.
Apparently this feature utilized a completely commented out 7+ years old
method, effectively doing nothing. Since it was designed with a completely
different editor design in mind it is pretty much incompatible and as such
it's best to remove it for now.
* GIProbe is now VoxelGI
* BakedLightmap is now LightmapGI
As godot adds more ways to provide GI (as an example, SDFGI in 4.0), the different techniques (which have different pros/cons) need to be properly named to avoid confusion.