When zooming with Ctrl+wheel, used fixed-factor steps instead of scroll wheel rate information.
Fixes#9177.
Important Notes
- Wheel events are distinguished from trackpad gestures, so that OS X pinch-zoom still works nicely.
- When zooming with the mouse wheel, scale factor is rounded (geometrically) to the nearest power of √2, and then stepped up or down by the same factor; this ensures that round values like 100% are never skipped over.
- Added directed-clamping logic, so that if the zoom is moved outside the clamping range of a zoom-method, it can be stepped back into range without jumping.
Fixes#9331
Fixed issues with wrong initial size and missing edit caret in text widgets.
<img width="311" alt="image" src="https://github.com/enso-org/enso/assets/919491/44f257cc-18a1-4a9f-9ae0-c1dd9b86674e">
# Important Notes
Automated tests for font loading/initial size will follow shortly. The text caret is not really testable, since it is a hosted object visual issue.
Addressing review suggestions from #9130
- Removing `N` binding
- Removing duplicated `Toggle fullscreen vis` binding
A few important differences from the suggested implementation:
1. There is no easy way to implement `nextType` on GraphEditor – we simply don’t have the required API
2. The keydown handler in `GraphVisualization` must be defined on window level still, otherwise it won’t get keydown events unless visualization is focused, and thus `nextType` won’t work because of (1)
No visual changes to the IDE.
Including arrow language in the distribution by default. Added a basic example for creating an Arrow array.
Making sure that memory layout agrees with Arrow specification (padding, continuous allocation of memory chunks).
Related to #9118.
This should unblock work on allowing serialization/deserialization to/from Parquet but I'd like to delay it to a follow up ticket as it is going to be a significant amount of specialized work.
- Close#9164
- Fix appearance of Record/Record Once icon in top menu
- Change icon for overriding execution context to record icon
- Unconditionally show per-node record icon if it is set
- Remove the ability to override the execution context to disabled
- Fix the icon for nodes with an overridden execution context always being the Enso icon
# Important Notes
None
- Close https://github.com/enso-org/cloud-v2/issues/866
- Remove *all* references to client keys and API base URLs from the codebase.
- The app can still be built by external contributors. *However*, the cloud backend (among some other things) will be completely disabled, as the required keys and base URLs will be missing.
- Add entry to `.gitignore` to allow `*.env` files in `app/ide-desktop/lib/dashboard/`
# Important Notes
- Tested (no `.env`; `.env` with prod backend; `.pbuchu.env`) on:
- `npm run dev` in `app/ide-desktop/lib/dashboard/`
- `./run ide build`
- `./run ide2 build`
- `./run gui watch`
Removes the old GUI1 code base and reduces the Rust code footprint by removing unused code.
# Important Notes
Updates build scripts and reformats part of the codebase with the autoformatter.
When the CB is opened, pan to show it.
Large screen:
<video src="https://github.com/enso-org/enso/assets/1047859/1a07c8cc-5818-420a-9fb3-1d1cb308cb87">
Small screen:
<video src="https://github.com/enso-org/enso/assets/1047859/a9f18df5-c0ca-426c-959a-bda5cd077541">
# Important Notes
A prioritized-coordinates approach is used to adjust panning goals based on screen space:
- Fitting the input area is highest-priority.
- If possible, the whole component panel area will be fit.
- If possible, the visualization preview will be fit.
- If there's extra room, margins will be included; the top and left are prioritized because those margins prevent overlap with fixed UI elements.
I have created PR with the first set of changes for the Engine CI. The changes are small and effectively consist of:
1. Spltting the `verifyLicensePackages`. It is now run only on Linux. There are hardly any time benefits, as the actual job cost is dominated by the overhead of spinning a new job — but it is not expensive in the big picture.
2. Splitting the Scala Tests into separate job. This is probably the biggest "atomic" piece of work we have.
3. Splitting the Standard Library Tests into a separate job.
The time is nicely split across the jobs now. The last run has:
* 27 min for Scala tests;
* 25 min for Standard Library tests;
* 24 min for the "rest": the old job containing everything that has not been split.
While total CPU time has increased (as jobs are not effectively reusing the same build context), the wall time has decreased significantly. Previously we had ~1 hour of wall time for the old monolithic job, so we are getting more than 2x speedup.
The now-slowest Scala tests job is currently comparable with the native Rust tests (and they should improve when the old gui is gone) — which are the slowest job across all CI checks.
The PR is pretty minimal. Several future improvements can be made:
* Reorganizing and splitting other "heavy" jobs, like the native image generation.
* Reusing the built Engine distribution. However, this is probably a lower priority than I initially thought.
* Building package takes several minutes, so duplicating this job is not that expensive.
* The package is OS-specific.
* Scala tests don't really benefit from it, they'd need way more compilation artifacts.
It'd make sense to reuse the distribution if we, for example, decided to split more jobs that actually benefit from it, like Standard Library tests.
* Reusing the Rust build script binary.
* As our self-hosted runners reuse environment, we effectively get this for free. Especially when Rust part of codebase is less frequently changed.
* This is however significant cost for the GitHub-hosted runners, affecting our macOS runners. Reusing the binary does not save wall time for jobs that are run in parallel (as we have enough runners), but if we introduce job dependencies that'd force sequential execution of jobs on macOS, this would be a significant need.
- Improved performance by batching simulatenous node edits, including metadata updates when dragging many selected nodes together.
- Updated Vue to new version, allowing us to use `defineModel`.
- Fixed#9161
- Unified all handling of auto-blur by making `useAutoBlur` cheap to register - all logic goes through a single window event handler.
- Combined all `ResizeObserver`s into one.
- Fixed the behaviour of repeated toast messages. Now only the latest compilation status is visible at any given time, and the errors disappear once compilation passes.
- Actually fixed broken interaction of node and visualization widths. There no longer is a style feedback loop and the visible node backdrop width no longer jumps or randomly fails to update.
Printing out `buildNativeImage` progress as soon as possible. In case of failure dumping it again as a whole.
- [x] All code follows the
[Scala](https://github.com/enso-org/enso/blob/develop/docs/style-guide/scala.md),
style guides.
- All code has been tested:
- [x] Manually verified the log is printed
When cleaning up board, I stumbled upon https://github.com/enso-org/enso/issues/5851 I tried to replace whenReady, and it just worked. Perhaps the freeze was fixed during some electron version bump.
Tests on other platforms (I'm using Garuda Linux) advised.
Fixes#5851
- Fix issue where `playwright-report/` is being typechecked by `npm run typecheck` in the dashboard, causing CI to fail
- Attempt to fix flaky dashboard test
# Important Notes
To test that typechecking isn't completely broken, it's recommended to intentionally create a type error in the dashboard code base.
This PR allows requesting a clean build when triggering the workflow through the manual dispatch.
Previously it was possible only by creating PR and adding the label to it.
Fixes the regression introduced by #9070 in `org.enso.benchmarks.generated.Collections.list_meta_fold` benchmark.
# Important Notes
As can be seen on the graph in IGV:
![image](https://github.com/enso-org/enso/assets/14013887/31b6ceca-4909-4a8f-987f-b456b3fb0a1b)
For some reason, `EqualsSimpleNode` is POLYMORPHIC. That seems to be the most visible performance problem.
First, I tried to introduce `ConditionProfile` with:
```diff
diff --git a/engine/runtime/src/main/java/org/enso/interpreter/node/expression/builtin/meta/EqualsNode.java b/engine/runtime/src/main/java/org/enso/interpreter/node/expression/builtin/meta/EqualsNode.java
index b368fb7fe..57274b37e 100644
--- a/engine/runtime/src/main/java/org/enso/interpreter/node/expression/builtin/meta/EqualsNode.java
+++ b/engine/runtime/src/main/java/org/enso/interpreter/node/expression/builtin/meta/EqualsNode.java
@@ -9,6 +9,7 @@ import com.oracle.truffle.api.dsl.Specialization;
import com.oracle.truffle.api.frame.VirtualFrame;
import com.oracle.truffle.api.interop.ArityException;
import com.oracle.truffle.api.nodes.Node;
+import com.oracle.truffle.api.profiles.ConditionProfile;
import org.enso.interpreter.dsl.AcceptsError;
import org.enso.interpreter.dsl.BuiltinMethod;
import org.enso.interpreter.node.EnsoRootNode;
@@ -46,6 +47,7 @@ public final class EqualsNode extends Node {
@Child private EqualsSimpleNode node;
@Child private TypeOfNode types;
@Child private WithConversionNode convert;
+ private final ConditionProfile equalsProfile = ConditionProfile.create();
private static final EqualsNode UNCACHED =
new EqualsNode(EqualsSimpleNodeGen.getUncached(), TypeOfNode.getUncached(), true);
@@ -85,7 +87,7 @@ public final class EqualsNode extends Node {
public boolean execute(
VirtualFrame frame, @AcceptsError Object self, @AcceptsError Object other) {
var areEqual = node.execute(frame, self, other);
- if (!areEqual) {
+ if (!equalsProfile.profile(areEqual)) {
var selfType = types.execute(self);
var otherType = types.execute(other);
if (selfType != otherType) {
```
But that did not resolve the issue.
My second attempt was to enable splitting for `EqualsSimpleNode` with `@com.oracle.truffle.api.dsl.ReportPolymorphism` annotation, which seems to resolve the issue. The benchmark is back to its original score, and `EqualsSimpleNode` is no longer POLYMORPHIC.
After investigating some errors, I found another two missing awaits in our tests. Because those are so easy to overlook, I added a lint rule which makes failure on unhandled promise (for e2e tests only).
Also, enabled HTML reports again, with traces this time, to enable closer investigation of any failure in the future. @mwu-tow added code for uploading them in GH.
- Adjusted `AWS_Credential` to have a `Default` and removed support for `Nothing` from functions.
- Renamed `Response_Body.to_file` to `Response_Body.write`.
- Add `write` to `Response`.
- Add `Table.get_value` and `DB_Table.get_value` allowing getting a single value from a table.
- Added `Data.download` allowing downloading from a URL to a file.
- Added text widget as input widget for `Data` methods.
![image](https://github.com/enso-org/enso/assets/4699705/fcfc8b1e-1197-4106-b8a7-43b1435327c0)
- Implements the core parts of #9048
- Currently the path resolution is done by resolving each segment, one by one - requiring as many API calls as there are segments in the path.
- This should be replaced in a followup PR, once https://github.com/enso-org/cloud-v2/issues/899 is implemented.
After some recent changes, the HTTP server helper would no longer stop when Ctrl-C was issued. That is because the semaphore was being used in the wrong way: it was released on the same thread that was supposed to acquire it - but the acquire never returned as it would be waiting for the release, so the release could also never happen. Thus the main thread was in a constant dead-lock.
Fixes the issue with attaching generic annotations in complex types.
Annotations in the type body could be lost during the compilation if its constructor was defined at the end of the type definition.
Fixes#7562. Close a dropdown when:
- A click outside the dropdown occurs
- `Esc` is pressed
- Any other `Interaction` is started (i.e. using a shortcut)
# Important Notes
- Simplifies `Interaction` API and uses it for closing/canceling CB as well as dropdowns.
- Adjusted some event handlers so that handled clicks don't also register as GraphEditor background clicks.
- Introduces a CSS approach to prevent unwanted text-selections; we were doing it with JS until my previous PR, and the JS solution was breaking things.