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This is the official upstream of the Subsurface divelog program
6b0bb87f5b
.. this now registers the dive parsing callback, and starts to parse the data. So I can see the last divetime on my Suunto Vyper Air now. Still a lot more boilerplate stuff to go, though. The libdivecomputer interfaces really are pretty insane: why should the caller set up the dive parsing for each computer type, when libdivecomputer knows what types it has? IOW, much of that boilerplate should be hidden inside of libdivecomputer, rather than exposed to the user. But whatever. I'm taking pieces from "examples/universal.c" as I go along (it's under LGPL 2.1). I want to do it in small chunks just to feel that I understand what's going on, rather than just blindly copying it all. Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> |
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dives | ||
.gitignore | ||
display.h | ||
dive.c | ||
dive.h | ||
divelist.c | ||
divelist.h | ||
equipment.c | ||
info.c | ||
libdivecomputer.c | ||
main.c | ||
Makefile | ||
parse-xml.c | ||
profile.c | ||
README | ||
save-xml.c | ||
scripts |
Half-arsed divelog software in C. I'm tired of java programs that don't work etc. License: GPLv2 You need libxml2-devel, gtk2-devel and GConf2-devel to build this. Usage: make ./divelog dives/*.xml to see my dives (with no notes or commentary). There's a lot of duplicates in there, and divelog will de-duplicate the ones that are exactly the same (just because they were imported multiple times). But at least two of the dives have duplicates that were edited by Dirk in the Suunto Dive Manager, so they don't trigger the "exact duplicates" match. WARNING! I wasn't kidding when I said that I've done this by reading gtk2 tutorials as I've gone along. If somebody is more comfortable with gtk, feel free to send me (signed-off) patches. Just as an example of the extreme hackiness of the code, I don't even bother connecting a signal for the "somebody edited the dive info" cases. I just save/restore the dive info every single time you switch dives. Christ! That's truly lame. Also, I don't actually integrate directly with libdivecomputer, I just read the XML files it can spit out. But I included my own raw dive profile xml files for anybody who isn't a diver, but decides that they want to educate me in gtk. NOTE! Some of the dives are pretty pitiful. All the last dives are from my divemaster course, so they are from following open water students along (many of them the confined*water dives). There a lot of the action is at the surface, so some of the "dives" are 4ft deep and 2min long. Contributing: Please either send me signed-off patches or a pull request with signed-off commits. If you don't sign off on them, I will not accept them. This means adding a line that says "Signed-off-by: Name <email>" at the end of each commit, indicating that you wrote the code and have the right to pass it on as an open source patch. See: http://gerrit.googlecode.com/svn/documentation/2.0/user-signedoffby.html Also, please write good git commit messages. A good commit message looks like this: header line: explaining the commit in one line Body of commit message is a few lines of text, explaining things in more detail, possibly giving some background about the issue being fixed, etc etc. The body of the commit message can be several paragrahps, and please do proper word-wrap and keep columns shorter than about 74 characters or so. That way "git log" will show things nicely even when it's indented. Reported-by: whoever-reported-it Signed-off-by: Your Name <youremail@yourhost.com> where that header line really should be meaningful, and really should be just one line. That header line is what is shown by tools like gitk and shortlog, and should summarize the change in one readable line of text, independently of the longer explanation.