enso/app/gui
Paweł Grabarz 99a6f8f2f9
Decouple node edit mode from ports (#5983)
Implements #5919

Apart from some fixed glitches, no visual differences are present. This is mostly a refactor.

- Decoupled node edit mode code from existing port implementation, so ports can easily be replaced in the near future without affecting edit functionality.
- Connected ports and widgets are now always hidden in edit mode. Previously in some situations the colored shapes were incorrectly displayed at wrong positions during editing.
- When entering edit mode, the text cursor is placed at the correct location corresponding to clicked code, compensating for shift introduced by argument placeholders.

# Important Notes
There is a remaining known issue with incoming edges being placed at incorrect places during edit mode, sometimes even outside of the node. This issue is also present in develop. It doesn't make sense to resolve it now, as we are planning to rewrite the ports tree very soon. It will be fixed with that rewrite.
2023-03-29 11:16:31 +00:00
..
analytics Dependency cleaning (#4092) 2023-01-27 23:39:37 +01:00
config Rendering improvement/debugging support (#6019) 2023-03-21 06:34:24 +00:00
controller Search suggestions by static attribute (#6036) 2023-03-23 15:02:25 +00:00
docs Use .node-version for pinning Node.js version (#6057) 2023-03-23 12:00:08 +00:00
enso-profiler-enso-data Improving Performance Monitor (#5895) 2023-03-21 09:17:54 +01:00
language Decouple node edit mode from ports (#5983) 2023-03-29 11:16:31 +00:00
src Decouple node edit mode from ports (#5983) 2023-03-29 11:16:31 +00:00
suggestion-database Cursor aware Component Browser (#5770) 2023-03-22 17:10:37 +00:00
tests Dynamic dropdown support (#4072) 2023-02-04 00:50:24 +00:00
view Decouple node edit mode from ports (#5983) 2023-03-29 11:16:31 +00:00
Cargo.toml Better sorting after filtering items in the Component Browser (#4115) 2023-03-16 11:23:40 +00:00
config.yaml Bump supported engine version (#5676) 2023-02-17 12:46:16 +00:00
LICENSE Refactor gui/src/rust/ide to two app/gui and app/ide-desktop (#3157) 2021-11-16 10:04:56 +01:00
README.md Bumped the build script (#3489) 2022-06-01 13:44:40 +02:00

This is the subtree for Enso's graphical interface component. If you're looking for the repository root, you may find it at at 👉 github.com/enso-org/enso 👈


Enso IDE

Overview

Chat License License

Enso is an award-winning interactive programming language with dual visual and textual representations. It is a tool that spans the entire stack, going from high-level visualisation and communication to the nitty-gritty of backend services, all in a single language. Watch the following introduction video to learn what Enso is, and how it helps companies build data workflows in minutes instead of weeks.

This repository contains the source code of Enso interface only. If you are interested in how the interface is build or you want to develop it with us, you are in the right place. See the development and contributing guidelines to learn more about the code structure and the development process.


Getting Started

Enso is distributed both in form of pre-build packages for MacOS, Windows, or Linux, as well as the source code. See the demo scenes, and read the documentation to learn more.


Building

The project builds on macOS, Linux, and Windows. Build functionality is provided by our build script, that are accessible through run (Linux and macOS) or run.cmd (Windows) wrappers.

To build the project, simply run ./run ide build (on Linux or macOS) or .\run.cmd ide build (Windows) to build IDE. To learn more about other available commands use --help argument. Read the detailed development guide to learn more.


License

The Enso Language Compiler is released under the terms of the Apache v2 License. The Enso Graphical Interface and it's rendering engine are released under the terms of the AGPL v3 License. This license set was choosen to both provide you with a complete freedom to use Enso, create libraries, and release them under any license of your choice, while also allowing us to release commercial products on top of the platform, including Enso Cloud and Enso Enterprise on-premise server managers.


Contributing

Enso is a community-driven open source project which is and will always be open and free to use. We are committed to a fully transparent development process and highly appreciate every contribution. If you love the vision behind Enso and you want to redefine the data processing world, join us and help us track down bugs, implement new features, improve the documentation or spread the word! Join our community on a Discord chat and read the development and contributing guidelines.