It maintains a JSON file of ways to merge that the importer also uses.
For maps fast to import, this is the nicest workflow. Unlike map_editor,
turns and trimmed roads can also be checked.
toggle how many CPUs to thrash. We always use all of them, except for
one case, where a separately named method is more clear. Also make that
variation use all but 1 CPU, instead of just half.
selector into debug mode. #597
Previously, it was used both to search/replace lane types and to
select roads, then dump them in various formats. Just preserve the
latter behavior.
I experimented on the Rainier Valley map, which recently started
gridlocking due to too many cars doing this, to tune the value. Got it
running again! The two other maps keep running, with some trips on
average getting a little slower.
Button colors are now determined by the color scheme, but for now all
schemes are hardcoded to use the same "night" button colors. Read on for
rationale...
Previously, which button colors to use (dark/light) was specified inline
while building the UI.
Eventually we want to live in a world where color scheme determines:
- panel colors
- button colors
- text colors
The theme could already choose panel colors easily enough, but because
the buttons and text were not determined by theme, choosing anything
other than a black or dark grey panel color makes the buttons and text
unreadable.
This PR tackled the themeable "button colors" portion, but all themes
continue to use the "night" colors for now, because using the actual
"day" colors would still make the text unreadable.
next up: themeable text!
The one intentional regression is within the pregame tutorial,
which has always been styled differently from the rest of the app. An
expeditious hack has caused the prev/next/continue buttons to lose their
visible hover state. I'll restore this upon completing the day theme
work.
City names are now disambiguated by a two-letter country code. This
commit handles almost everything needed to make this transition. Main
next steps are fixing up map edits automatically and making the city
picker UI understand the extra level of hierarchy.
A little bit of fallout: lakeslice gridlocks again; this regression is
actually from the recent traffic signal changes, but I'm just now
regenerating everything. Will fix soon.
- Stop alerting when slow pedestrians can't make it through the minimum
crosswalk time
- Simpler iteration style in lagging_green.rs
- Totally delete the old brute force signal config code; it never worked
well, and the improved heuristics eliminate the need for it anyway
- Make a Duration::max function and use it in one case
use the site name as the city, instead of picking the "closest" major
city. This is introducing too much friction in automation.
cyipt/actdev#65
There will be a few awkward results -- cambridge gets renamed, and lcid
gets disassociated from leeds. Worth it for now.
This was all done by search/replace, and should not affect
functionality.
Goals:
- be consistent with the figma terminology.
- consistently order:
"btn_{solid|outline|plain}_{dark|light}_{text|image|dropdown|back|etc}"
This will make it easier to visually track the progress improving the
import. Originally London was added to have one left-hand driving map
under the test, but Cambridge works for that too, and it also includes
separate cycleways.
Also fix a crash when trying to draw very very tiny arrows.
a hard error when they become out-of-date going forward.
Better heuristics make some of these unnecessary. And now the the JSON
files are in this repo, updating files manually when pulling down new
OSM data becomes less tedious.
- Simple -- one OpenGL call and feeding to the awesome image crate
- Faster -- seemingly don't need the sleep() for whatever vsync problems
- Portable -- doesn't use the Linux scrot tool
- I can switch windows and wiggle the cursor with impunity while this runs
One disadvantage: screencaps in S3 are now slightly larger PNGs, because
for some reason, the image/gif feature is super slow, even in release
mode.
For now, this makes the process of screenshot diffing map changes
easier. But it also might help with producing raster tiles for Leaflet. #440
Also, had to regenerate lakeslice because of the previous change --
it had an old adaptive signal baked in.
widgetry, geom, and abstutil may wind up on crates.io in some form to
let other projects use widgetry. abstio has A/B Street-specific tricks
for reading data on native/web. Note widgetry still depends on abstio,
will figure out how to clean that up next.