The starting size of a webview seems to be 640x480, but if it is hidden
without retainSizeWhenHidden being set, the dialog it contains can end
up with a height of 0, which prevents the dialog from being shown.
By being explicit about our desired starting size, we can use a more
useful default, and avoid the issue of missing dialogs.
When opening the graphs screen in dark mode, we want to load the
page first and then reveal the webview, to prevent a flash of white
that can appear as the page loads. Previously we did this for any
call to load_ts_page(), but this results in flicker when refreshing
an existing webview, such as the move from deck list to congrats screen.
In those cases, at least on the machines I have to test with here, the
refresh is smoother without the hide and show step.
The new window case is still not ideal - while the hide+show prevents a
flash of white, there is a flash of black instead, presumably as the
webview draws the initially-blank framebuffer with the contents of the
webview.
* Scroll stats to top when exporting (#1114)
It's obviously a bit of a "hacky" solution, since it's slightly jarring for users to scroll down, click export, then find themselves all the way at the top again, but it's somewhat less confusing than wondering why your PDF is broken :-)
* Clarified comment in stats.py (#1114)
* Apply scrolling fix to new stats screen, not legacy stats (dae)
Also wait for JS callback before saving the PDF, as JS is executed
asynchronously.
* Use submodule imports in aqt
* Use submodule imports in pylib
* More submodule imports in pylib
These required removing some direct imports to get rid of import cycles.
The enum changes should work on PyQt 5.x, and are required in PyQt 6.x.
They are not supported by the PyQt5 typings however, so we need to run
our tests with PyQt6.
Reviews and operations on the backend that support undoing can now be
committed immediately, so they will not be lost in the event of a crash.
This required tweaks to a few places:
- don't set collection mtime on save() unless changes were made in
Python, as otherwise we end up accidentally clearing the backend undo
queue
- autosave() is now run on every reset()
- garbage collection now runs in a timer, instead of relying on
autosave() to be run periodically
This reverts commit 62600051ae, reversing
changes made to 88553acb0d.
- Standard graphs render incorrectly on latest version - the wrong number
of days are shown, and the grid lines look wrong. Any version after 0.8.3
seems to suffer from this problem.
- Pie graphs and stack graphs don't render - they are provided in separate
files, and plot.js in previous Anki versions has them included in the one
file. To maintain compatibility with add-ons, we'd need to create a single
file as before, instead of importing multiple files.
If the above issues are fixed I'd be happy to merge this in again, but
as the old graphs are on the way out, it's probably not worth the effort.
Running and testing should be working on the three platforms, but
there's still a fair bit that needs to be done:
- Wheel building + testing in a venv still needs to be implemented.
- Python requirements still need to be compiled with piptool and pinned;
need to compile on all platforms then merge
- Cargo deps in cargo/ and rslib/ need to be cleaned up, and ideally
unified into one place
- Currently using rustls to work around openssl compilation issues
on Linux, but this will break corporate proxies with custom SSL
authorities; need to conditionally use openssl or use
https://github.com/seanmonstar/reqwest/pull/1058
- Makefiles and docs still need cleaning up
- It may make sense to reparent ts/* to the top level, as we don't
nest the other modules under a specific language.
- rspy and pylib must always be updated in lock-step, so merging
rspy into pylib as a private module would simplify things.
- Merging desktop-ftl and mobile-ftl into the core ftl would make
managing and updating translations easier.
- Obsolete scripts need removing.
- And probably more.