Nico Weber 7d1d6012bf LibGfx: Make Path::stroke_to_fill longer
Instead of one dense loop, there are now one call for the outer
stroke, one for the first cap, one for the inner stroke, and one
for the second cap.

This will make it easier to do butt caps correctly, and to add
support for square caps.

It also makes it easier to not add any caps at all for closed
paths.

Maybe it also helps for adding non-round joins eventually.

In particular:

* `shape_idx` now starts at 1, since we now start with the
  stroke part, not the cap part, and explicitly call `close()`
  to connect the second cap with the first stroke
* Having explicit cap building code means that the convolution
  loop is kind-of duplicated for round caps
* We now need to remove duplicate points, else the explicit
  cap drawing gets confused. This is the only non-behavior-preserving
  part of this commit, and it's a progression for lines that have
  two identical points at the end of an open path (this would previously
  not correctly draw a round join)
* Similarly, there's no explicit rejection of empty paths
2024-10-16 18:18:43 -04:00
2024-10-15 12:08:50 -04:00
2024-10-09 19:55:11 -04:00
2024-10-16 18:18:43 -04:00
2022-09-10 17:32:55 +01:00
2024-09-22 09:06:02 -04:00
2024-01-06 17:39:16 -05:00
2022-06-29 03:29:27 +00:00

SerenityOS

Graphical Unix-like operating system for x86-64 computers.

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About

SerenityOS is a love letter to '90s user interfaces with a custom Unix-like core. It flatters with sincerity by stealing beautiful ideas from various other systems.

Roughly speaking, the goal is a marriage between the aesthetic of late-1990s productivity software and the power-user accessibility of late-2000s *nix. This is a system by us, for us, based on the things we like.

You can watch videos of the system being developed on YouTube:

Screenshot

Screenshot as of c03b788.png

Features

  • Modern x86 64-bit kernel with pre-emptive multi-threading
  • Browser with JavaScript, WebAssembly, and more (check the spec compliance for JS, CSS, and Wasm)
  • Security features (hardware protections, limited userland capabilities, W^X memory, pledge & unveil, (K)ASLR, OOM-resistance, web-content isolation, state-of-the-art TLS algorithms, ...)
  • System services (WindowServer, LoginServer, AudioServer, WebServer, RequestServer, CrashServer, ...) and modern IPC
  • Good POSIX compatibility (LibC, Shell, syscalls, signals, pseudoterminals, filesystem notifications, standard Unix utilities, ...)
  • POSIX-like virtual file systems (/proc, /dev, /sys, /tmp, ...) and ext2 file system
  • Network stack and applications with support for IPv4, TCP, UDP; DNS, HTTP, Gemini, IMAP, NTP
  • Profiling, debugging and other development tools (Kernel-supported profiling, CrashReporter, interactive GUI playground, HexEditor, HackStudio IDE for C++ and more)
  • Libraries for everything from cryptography to OpenGL, audio, JavaScript, GUI, playing chess, ...
  • Support for many common and uncommon file formats (PNG, JPEG, GIF, MP3, WAV, FLAC, ZIP, TAR, PDF, QOI, Gemini, ...)
  • Unified style and design philosophy, flexible theming system, custom (bitmap and vector) fonts
  • Games (Solitaire, Minesweeper, 2048, chess, Conway's Game of Life, ...) and demos (CatDog, Starfield, Eyes, mandelbrot set, WidgetGallery, ...)
  • Every-day GUI programs and utilities (Spreadsheet with JavaScript, TextEditor, Terminal, PixelPaint, various multimedia viewers and players, Mail, Assistant, Calculator, ...)

... and all of the above are right in this repository, no extra dependencies, built from-scratch by us :^)

Additionally, there are over three hundred ports of popular open-source software, including games, compilers, Unix tools, multimedia apps and more.

How do I read the documentation?

Man pages are available online at man.serenityos.org. These pages are generated from the Markdown source files in Base/usr/share/man and updated automatically.

When running SerenityOS you can use man for the terminal interface, or help for the GUI.

Code-related documentation can be found in the documentation folder.

How do I build and run this?

See the SerenityOS build instructions or the Ladybird build instructions.

The build system supports a cross-compilation build of SerenityOS from Linux, macOS, Windows (with WSL2) and many other *Nixes. The default build system commands will launch a QEMU instance running the OS with hardware or software virtualization enabled as supported.

Ladybird runs on the same platforms that can be the host for a cross build of SerenityOS and on SerenityOS itself.

Get in touch and participate!

Join our Discord server: SerenityOS Discord

Before opening an issue, please see the issue policy.

A general guide for contributing can be found in CONTRIBUTING.md.

Authors

And many more! See here for a full contributor list. The people listed above have landed more than 100 commits in the project. :^)

License

SerenityOS is licensed under a 2-clause BSD license.

Description
Mirrored from GitHub
Readme BSD-2-Clause 536 MiB
Languages
C++ 88.2%
JavaScript 4.5%
HTML 3.3%
C 0.9%
CMake 0.8%
Other 2.2%