This one is a bit more tricky. There are two modes: set dive site
and set newly created dive site. This is realized using an OO model
with derived classed. Quite convoluted - but it seems to work.
Moreover, editing a dive site is not simply setting a value,
but the list of dives in a dive site has to be kept up to date.
Finally, we have to inform the dive site list of the changed
number of dives. Therefore add a new signal diveSiteDivesChanged.
To send only one signal per dive site, hook into the undo() and
redo() functions and call the functions of the base class there.
Signed-off-by: Berthold Stoeger <bstoeger@mail.tuwien.ac.at>
To keep the UI in a consistent state, update the notes field if
it is changed by an undo command. To that purpose, add a new
signal to diveListNotifier with a list of dives and a field-id
as payload.
Signed-off-by: Berthold Stoeger <bstoeger@mail.tuwien.ac.at>
Implement an undo command that edits the name of a dive site.
Connect it to the dive site table, so that names can be edited
directly in the table.
Send signals on undo / redo so that the dive site table and
the dive site edit widget can be updated.
Signed-off-by: Berthold Stoeger <bstoeger@mail.tuwien.ac.at>
Introduce two DiveListNotifier signals which are sent by
the undo commands if dives are added to / removed from the
core.
The signal has the dive site and the index in the global
dive site table as payload. Thus, the model has only to
remove the appropriate rows.
Signed-off-by: Berthold Stoeger <bstoeger@mail.tuwien.ac.at>
Add a new signal to DiveListNotifier. Send signal if dives are
added or removed and therefore the dive count of a dive site
changes. The dive sites are collected and the signal is sent
at the end of the command.
Add code to update the table view.
Signed-off-by: Berthold Stoeger <bstoeger@mail.tuwien.ac.at>
Select the proper dives after the add, remove, split and merge
dives commands on undo *and* redo. Generally, select the added
dives. For undo of add, remember the pre-addition selection.
For redo of remove, select the closest dive to the first removed
dive.
The biggest part of the commit is the signal-interface between
the dive commands and the dive-list model and dive-list view.
This is done in two steps:
1) To the DiveTripModel in batches of trips. The dive trip model
transforms the dives into indices.
2) To the DiveListView. The DiveListView has to translate the
DiveTripModel indexes to actual indexes via its QSortFilterProxy-
model.
For code-reuse, derive all divelist-changing commands from a new base-class,
which has a flag that describes whether the divelist changed. The helper
functions which add and remove dives are made members of the base class and
set the flag is a selected dive is added or removed.
To properly detect when the current dive was deleted it
became necessary to turn the current dive from an index
to a pointer, because indices are not stable.
Unfortunately, in some cases an index was expected and these
places now have to transform the dive into an index. These
should be converted in due course.
Signed-off-by: Berthold Stoeger <bstoeger@mail.tuwien.ac.at>
In DiveListView, we have a very fundamental problem: When
On the one hand, we get informed of user-selection in the
DiveListView::selectionChanged() slot. This has to set the
correct flags in the C-backend.
On the other hand, sometimes we have to set the selection
programatically, e.g. when selecting a trip. This is done
by calling QItemSelectionModel::select().
But: this will *also* call into the above slot, in which
we can't tell whether it was a user interaction or an
internal call. This can lead to either infinite loops or
very inefficient behavior, because the current dive
is set numerous times.
The current code is aware of that and disconnects the
corresponding signal. This is scary, as these signals are
set internally by the model and view. Replace this
by a global "command executing" flag in DiveListNotifier.
The flag is set using a "marker" class, which resets the flag
once it goes out of scope (cf. RAII pattern).
In DiveListView, only process a selection if the flag is not
set. Otherwise simply call the QTreeView base class, to reflect
the new selection in the UI.
To have a common point for notifications of selection changes,
add such a signal to DiveListNotifier. This signal will be
used by the DiveListView as well as the Command-objects.
Signed-off-by: Berthold Stoeger <bstoeger@mail.tuwien.ac.at>
Previously, each dive-list modifying function would lead to a
full model reset. Instead, implement proper Qt-model semantics
using beginInsertRows()/endInsertRows(), beginRemoveRows()/
endRemoveRows(), dataChange().
To do so, a DiveListNotifer singleton is generatated, which
broadcasts all changes to the dive-list. Signals are sent by
the commands and received by the DiveTripModel. Signals are
batched by dive-trip. This seems to be an adequate compromise
for the two kinds of list-views (tree and list). In the common
usecase mostly dives of a single trip are affected.
Thus, batching of dives is performed in two positions:
- At command-level to batch by trip
- In DiveTripModel to feed batches of contiguous elements
to Qt's begin*/end*-functions.
This is conceptually simple, but rather complex code. To avoid
repetition of complex loops, the batching is implemented in
templated-functions, which are passed lambda-functions, which
are called for each batch.
Signed-off-by: Berthold Stoeger <bstoeger@mail.tuwien.ac.at>