* Allow webviews to opt in to default D&D handling
* Remove redundant webview.js include
* Block default drag & drop behavior in reviewing screens
* Fix mypy error
* Add progress.single_shot()
* Fix periodic garbage collection
* Properly cleanup mediasync timers
* Revert some replacements with `single_shot()`
These timers shouldn't fire if their widget is destroyed.
* Add timer docs explaining issues and alternatives
* Apply suggestions from code review
* Tweak docstrings
* Fix wrong hook being torn down
* Fix item models not being destroyed
* Add missing gc for FilteredDeckConfigDialog
* Add missing type annotation
* Pass calling widget as parent to QTimer
Implicitly passing `self.mw` as the parent means that the QTimer won't
get destroyed before quitting the app, which also thwarts garbage
collection of any data captured by a passed closure.
* Make `Editor._links` an instance variable
Browser is inserting a closure into this dict capturing itself. As a class
variable, it won't get destroyed, so neither will the browser.
* Make `Editor._links` funcs take instance again
* Deprecate calling progress.timer() without parent
* show caller location when printing deprecation warning (dae)
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.
This reverts commit 54f51da944.
This breaks in the PyQt6 upgrade. There are no globals anymore, only
page profiles - but the code should probably be modifying a specific
webview instead of globals anyway.
Means URLs like :/icons/foo.jpg should become icons:foo.jpg
This is part of the prep work for a PyQt6 update. PyQt6 has dropped
pyrcc, so we can longer generate the icons_qrc.py file we did previously.
Qt Designer expects us to use the resource system, so we continue to
generate the icons.qrc file to make editing the UI files easier. But at
runtime, we no longer use that file.
This adds Python 3.9 and 3.10 typing syntax to files that import
attributions from __future___. Python 3.9 should be able to cope with
the 3.10 syntax, but Python 3.8 will no longer work.
On Windows/Mac, install the latest Python 3.9 version from python.org.
There are currently no orjson wheels for Python 3.10 on Windows/Mac,
which will break the build unless you have Rust installed separately.
On Linux, modern distros should have Python 3.9 available already. If
you're on an older distro, you'll need to build Python from source first.