Yes Linus, gas pressure can indeed go up during a dive
At first glance it seems logical to make the ending pressure be the
lowest pressure observed during a dive. But if you do valve shut down
drills with a tech setup (where you have a fully redundant double
tank setup with two valves, two regulators and a manifold in between),
then you continue to breath from what is indeed the same "tank", but still
the valve on which your air pressure transmitter sits does get shut down
and de-pressurized. So your pressure goes down by quite a bit, and then
comes back up when the valve is turned back on.
And the ending pressure of the dive (which is used for things like the SAC
calculation) is indeed potentially higher than the lowest pressure
observed during a dive.
Allow larger tanks (change maximum from 200 to 300 cuft)
We don't handle doubles any different than single tanks - so while
200 cuft was a sane maximum size for a tank, once you dive with
doubles this logic fails.
We may or may not decide to implement special handling for doubles at some
point, but for now simply allow for tanks all the way up to double-150.
Merge branch 'ui' of git://github.com/dirkhh/subsurface
* 'ui' of git://github.com/dirkhh/subsurface:
The notebook pages can only be dropped back into the main notebook
Linus would like to be less on the bleeding edge of Gtk+
Use the correct signal to avoid Gtk-CRITICAL error message
Clean up the drag and drop code and allow ripping off the Dive Profile
Use the correct signal to avoid Gtk-CRITICAL error message
We used the wrong signal - "data-drag-received" is intended to check
whether the target will accept the drop. What we want is the "drag-drop"
signal which tells the widget that something was dropped on it.
Also fix an embarrassing lack of NULL pointer checks in my string
comparisons...
Clean up the drag and drop code and allow ripping off the Dive Profile
Linus had used some deprecated interfcase and didn't correctly untangle
the new window that he created (hiding it the window... very nifty).
I think I'm closer to the real solution with a data structure that keeps
track of the components of the new top level window that I need to be able
to untangle (and eventually, destroy) at the end.
The one error I also can't seem to get rid of is the
Clean up the drag and drop code and allow ripping of the Dive Profile
Add note on dive computers using the same import engine
Lots of dive computers are just variations on a theme, or sometimes even
just rebadged copies of each others with different manufacturer and
model names. The import dialog may not mention your exact dive computer
by name, but that doesn't necessarily mean that you cannot import data
from it.
Make that clearer in the README, and list the rough list of dive
computers supported by libdivecomputer.
Add drag-n-drop support to be able to re-integrate the dive list
This is somewhat hacky, and there is clearly something I still don't
understand about gtk selections and drag-n-drop. Dropping it back
works, but I get a nasty error when I do it:
even though I actually never set any selection at all directly. So
there must be some internal gtk rule that I am violating, but I can't
see what it is.
I probably shouldn't commit it with a known ugly wart like that, but I
really have no clue. Maybe somebody else can figure out what is up.
That also makes it always stay in front of the other window, which is
just annoying. I only did it because I wanted to make sure it dies when
the main window does, but since we just kill the main loop when closing
either window, that just isn't an issue.
Merge branch 'otu-tracking-v2' of git://github.com/dirkhh/subsurface
* 'otu-tracking-v2' of git://github.com/dirkhh/subsurface:
Store options in gconf
Add preference option to chose if SAC and/or OTU should be in divelist
Fix up trivial conflicts in gtk-gui.c (cleanup in gtk dialog wrt
gtk_dialog_get_content_area() having introduced a new 'vbox' widget)
While it's not the most elegant way to do this I opted to store the
options with "inverted polarity" - i.e., the options that are supposed to
default to "True" are stored inverted since gconf reports an unset option
(first time the user runs the program) as "False".
I've been wondering how to make 'subsurface' work better on a small
screen (I used to travel with a crappy netbook - I may have upgraded my
laptop since, but it is still a design goal of mine to make sure it all
works fine in that kind of environment).
And ever since the dive list was made much wider and moved below the
notebook, it's annoyed me how much room it all takes if I want to have
both a reasonable plot window and several dives visible at the same
time.
The solution seems to be to just make the dive list be a notebook page.
That makes the default layout very dense.
At the same time, when you have the pixels, it's horrible, because you
would want to see the dive list and move between dives while at the same
time also seeing the dive profile change. But that is solvable by
simply making the dive list notebook page be detachable, so if you have
a nice big screen, just detach the dive list page and now you have
independent windows for the dive list and the dive info.
NOTE! I don't have any way to re-attach the dang thing. I think I'd
need to learn about drag-and-drop targets etc. So once you've detached
the dive list, it stays detached.
Update Mares IconHd parsing to current libdivecomputer interface
The libdivecomputer interfaces are pure crap. There are no generic
"open the dive computer" or "create a parser for the dive computer"
interfaces, instead each dive computer you support has its own open and
parser generator interface.
And they change. Happily fairly seldom, but they change. And two days
ago, Jef changed the interface for the Mares Icon HD computer in order
to support the newer HD Net Ready variant.
I've asked Jef to make a sane interface for "open the dive computer" and
"just create the parser" for libdivecomputer, but he claims that he
cannot just track the device model details internally. Which is
obviously a completely bogus claim, since the way *we* track the model
details is to just feed it back from the silly event.
libdivecomputer should just do that internally and not bother us with
its crazy internal model numbers. But whatever.
In the meantime, work around this braindamage, and hope that
libdivecomputer comes to its senses some day.
Stop libdivecomputer import when we start seeing old dives
I don't know about other dive computers, but the Suunto Vyper Air is
slow as hell to import all the dives from. And libdivecomputer seems to
be importing dives "most recent first", so this just makes it stop
importing dives when it finds a dive that we've already seen.
Caveat: libdivecomputer has this fancy notion of "dive fingerprints",
and claims that's the way to do things. That seems to be overly
complicated, and not worth the bother.
If you worry about the import finishing early due to already having some
dives with the same date in your dive list, just import starting from an
empty state, and thus get a pure "dive computer only" state with no
early out. Then you can just load the old dives afterwards, and depend
on subsurface merging any duplicates.
But for normal operation, when you just want to import a couple of new
dives from your dive computer, the "exit import early when you see a
duplicate" is the right thing to do.
Add a GtkEntry to allow editing of the device name
Ok, so some file chooser widget with a popup dialog would have been more
professional, but I'm lazy. Plus I suspect the popup would look
horrible when populated with /dev entries, and I don't think there is
any sane filter function.
So this works, and means that you don't *have* to recompile the whole
program just because you have your dive computer on something else than
a USB serial line.
I suspect I should save the default name as a config variable too.
Maybe a setting in the preferences dialog.
It's really just about the logo, but whatever. Dirk tells me I need one
of these in order to call it 1.0. And I'm not going to fall into the
trap of thinking that 1.0 needs to be something polished, it just needs
to be working well enough..
This is *really* ugly. We really should just create some kind of widget
that when moused over will show the event. Or something. Rather than
putting text on top of other text: the events - when they happen - are
usually bunched together (PO2 warnings, max depth, fast ascent leading
to mandatory safety stop, you name it).
But at least this way we see that the data is there, even if we see it
in ugly ways.
Drop surface events when reading from an XML file too
Remember those useless surface events that we ignore when we import a
dive from a dive computer? Yeah, they exist in the libdivelog xml files
too. So ignore them when we see them there too.
As reported by Mauro Dreissig, the progress bar doesn't work and causes
a SIGSEGV due to a missing allocation. The code broke when Dirk
separated out the GUI from the core code, and I hadn't tried
divecomputer downloads since.
The calculation assumes that the cylinderindex in each sample tells us
which PO2 the dive was breathing at that time. This needs to be verified
with dives where there is an actual gas switch.
No idea where to display them, yet. Far fewer people will care about this
than care about SAC - does this still rate a spot in the dive_list?
I guess I could make it part of the dive_info - but it's not editable.
It doesn't seem to fit with the equipment page (even though this is the
one editable field that is related - nitrox %)
We should always strive to have a dive selected, so pick the first one
(that was how the dive list logic worked anyway, it just wasn't truly
selected at the tree-view level, so it wasn't *visibly* the selected
dive).
It used to be "index 0" which originally was the date string, but not
only has that changed (it's now just the dive index), it's kind of
pointless to search for a date string.
Show "m" or "ft" instead of "max/m" vs "max/ft". The column really
doesn't want to be that wide. The column header is already the widest
part of it even with this short name (due to the sort order arrow
thing).
Merge branch 'quit-handling' of git://github.com/dirkhh/subsurface
* 'quit-handling' of git://github.com/dirkhh/subsurface:
Use the last (or only) filename on command line as default for saving
Show the "save changes" dialog before the main window is destroyed
Check for changes at regular 'quit' events as well
Catch changes to the info of the current dive when quitting
Tracking changes to tanks is trivial
Simplistic first attempt to get changes saved when quitting subsurface
It's getting to the point where I'm happy with this. This just makes
the spacing between the location and the notes a bit bigger to visually
separate them more, and adds units ("min") to the dive duration (and
removes the seconds, that really didn't make any sense at an overview
level).
For really long dive locations, we now limit the width to the same size
as the date and time, and force it to a single line - with an ellipsis
if it ends up being too big.
Also, since we no longer use any markup anywhere, we migth as well show
the dive buddy information too, as we don't need no stinking quoting.
Show the "save changes" dialog before the main window is destroyed
By using the delete-event callback instead of the destroy callback we are
able to display our dialog (and the file-save dialog) while the program
window is still being displayed. Much nicer this way.
Catch changes to the info of the current dive when quitting
As the application shuts down we do one more check to see if the dive that
is currently being displayed has been modified (we previously just checked
as we switch dives)
This way we can avoid the need for quoting, since we can just use text
rendering instead of markup for the free-form fields. And we will want
to make the pango layout width different for the date and location,
since we want to fit the depth/duration to the right of them.
I still haven't set the different width for the date/location, but this
at least is going in the rigth direction.
The default cairo font seems to be sans, but the default pango font is
serif. Maybe it has something to do with my system font settings, but I
doubt it: my desktop font settings are all sans-serif. So I think pango
is just showing bad taste.
Anyway, this just hardcodes the font to "Sans". Maybe somebody wants to
make this all part of preferences some day, or pick it from their
desktop font preferences. In the meantime, just fix the pango brain-damage.
This makes things slightly prettier and adds back the depth and duration
details to the printout.
Still a few known problems: font choice, and the depth/duration thing
can end up overlapping with a long location name. But it looks pretty
good on the whole.
This gets us text wrapping etc. I think I have some serious memory leak
somewhere, though, because if I print out all my dives it eventually
ends up with broken dives and doesn't complete. But I am going to
commit this as a "it kind of works" point.
The layout is crap, the handling of long lines in notes (or location) is
wrong, the dive number handling is wrong.
The thing is just a toy.
But it's a toy that kind of works, and gives a much better idea of what
a real dive log printout might look like. With the right kind of dive
notes, it looks fine.
Four dives per page sounds good. Maybe even six? But dangit, the
default font choice for cairo printing sucks. And I need to learn about
pango for actually printing the dive info.
That was stupid. The divelist column generation cleanup (commit d3feb78df527: "Make helper function for creating TreeView columns in the
dive list") had a but too much copy-paste going on, and didn't always
have the right column indexes.. t still *looked* right, but sorting
didn't work at all.
Reported-by: Chris Lewis <chrislewis915@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
The following are UI toolkit specific:
gtk-gui.c - overall layout, main window of the UI
divelist.c - list of dives subsurface maintains
equipment.c - equipment / tank information for each dive
info.c - detailed dive info
print.c - printing
The rest is independent of the UI:
main.c i - program frame
dive.c i - creates and maintaines the internal dive list structure
libdivecomputer.c
uemis.c
parse-xml.c
save-xml.c - interface with dive computers and the XML files
profile.c - creates the data for the profile and draws it using cairo
This commit should contain NO functional changes, just moving code around
and a couple of minor abstractions.
* git://github.com/sirowain/subsurface:
Fix Segmentation fault when trying to print an empty plot.
Provide an icon for subsurface.
Added a comment about libusb dependency in Makefile.
Add "Apply"/"Cancel" buttons to dive equipment page
It's too damn easy to make mistakes and not even notice them (odd gtk
widget selection and keyboard input), or just start editing a cylinder
thing and realize it was wrong.
So instead of always saving the equipment information implicitly, add
explicit "Apply" and "Cancel" buttons that save the information (or
re-load it from the dive data structure)
So now you need to press an extra button for your changes to *really*
take effect. It can be a bit annoying, but it's better than the silent
accidental equipment change that could happen before.
Attempt to get the location column to resize in a sensible way
Previously the SAC column was the one that expanded which is silly
We also used to cut the location off at 16 characters
Now we try to make the location the one that expands and allow up to 40
characters, but there's something broken, still. If you manually shrink
the location column to its minimum size then subsequently resizing the
window gets the desired behavior. But if you don't manually resize the
location column it doesn't shrink correctly for windows that are smaller
than the space we need for all columns to fully display (instead we get a
horizontal scrollbar)
Instead o fhaving everything in the "File" menu, make a separate menu
for things that are very much specific about divelogs, rather than
"generic" things like open/save/import.
Fix Segmentation fault when trying to print an empty plot.
When printing an empty plot, the function was missing nullability check for 'current_dive'. Now the print of an empty plot results with an empty blank page.
A better solution could be making unsensitive the Print entry in the menu, until a plot is loaded.
I designed a simple blue icon for subsurface with a diver in the middle.
As suggested by Dirk Hohndel, I added the surface line above diver's head,
so that now the icon reflects better the new application name.
Added a comment about libusb dependency in Makefile.
Due to libdivecomputer's dependency, can be necessary to add libusb to pkg-config in order to compile,
so I exported the pkg-config line in the subsurface target to LIBS variable, and added a comment about libusb.
It got removed by some of my overly aggressive cleanup in commit fefcbf125e89 ("Remove dive info frame") because the dive info frame
initialization also initialized the main window title..
And I *really* would want to make the dive list be a ComboBox or
something like that, rather than a ListView. I need to really
understand those things, though.
Turn the rest of the duplicate string fields to use render functions
So instead of having a depth field (in mm) for sorting, and the text
field that contains the same thing in text, we now have all the fields
we use in "native" format, and we just render them as text dynamically.
Typo turned EAN (Enriched Air Nitrox) to EAD. Which does mean something
too, just to confuse people - but while it's still nitrox-related, it's
entirely the wrong thing (Equivalent Air Depth). I don't think anybody
would ever care to see *that*. With computers, why would you care?
Anyway, Dirk noticed it, and suggested I just use O2% instead. It's not
like EAN is all that readable either.