https://github.com/jrincayc/ucblogo-code
Revision 7d4fd39c6d7afe4b0946839a1342c4ee4ef18d9b authored by Joshua J. Cogliati on 31 July 2020, 22:31:27 UTC, committed by Joshua J. Cogliati on 31 July 2020, 22:31:27 UTC
1 parent 6a763c5
Raw File
Tip revision: 7d4fd39c6d7afe4b0946839a1342c4ee4ef18d9b authored by Joshua J. Cogliati on 31 July 2020, 22:31:27 UTC
macOS needs to get the CXX and CC from wx to compile correctly.
Tip revision: 7d4fd39
newtermnotes

How the GUI communicates with Logo in wxWidgets:


Everything is done with a single thread. We have overriden the 
main event loop from wxWidgets (via LogoApplication::OnRun()),
and events are handled periodically through calls to 
check_wx_stop(), which calls LogoEventManager::ProcessEvents().
To prevent yielding too much time for event checking, we have a
"fudge factor" that delays how often we yield to the wxWidgets
GUI event checking code, and a parameter that let's us force
yielding if we are say polling for user input. All events (key
press events, window resize, etc) are handled during the yield.
There is a trade-off between responsiveness in the UI (how fast 
the GUI recognizes that a key has been pressed) and overall speed 
of the program (when crunching numbers or painting) when adjusting
the fudge factor.


Character buffers

in wxTerminal:  
 char input_buffer[MAXINBUFF];   //stores typed input (before send to logo)

in wxMain:
 char output_buffer[MAXOUTBUFF]; //stores output to send to terminal (from logo)
 char buff[BUFF_LEN];            //stores input to send to logo (from input_buffer)

When polling for input, any typed characters are stored in input_buffer, which
keeps track of total characters and where the cursor position is (because you can
use the left and right arrow keys to go back). 
When the enter key is pressed, one line is put into the logo buffer (buff) and
will be read from logo.
Whenever logo needs to print characters to screen, the characters are put in 
output_buffer and will be displayed by the GUI.


Terminal Display Character Storage

The contents of the terminal are stored in a linked list of character arrays.
There are two structures, one that stores the actual characters and mode flags
(bold, standout mode, etc), and one that stores line information (where each
line starts). Both are linked lists of blocks. 

struct wxterm_char_buffer {
  unsigned char cbuf[WXTERM_CB_SIZE];       //characters
  unsigned char mbuf[WXTERM_CB_SIZE];       //mode flags
  wxterm_char_buffer *next; //next part of buffer
} ;

struct wxterm_charpos {
  wxterm_char_buffer *buf;   //which char buffer
  int offset;                //offset into buffer
  int line_length;           //length of line
} ;

A charpos points to some character in the character buffer. There are macros
to help navigate. (line_length may or may not be used, depending on the situation).


char_of(charpos)        retrieves the character referenced by charpos
mode_of(charpos)        retrieves the mode of the character referenced by charpos
inc_charpos(charpos)    puts charpos to next character 
		        (goes to next block if necessary)
adjust_charpos(charpos) if offset too large, adjusts charpos so that it points to 
                    	the right block (commonly used to jump many characters 
    			forward)



struct wxterm_line_buffer {
  wxterm_charpos lbuf[WXTERM_LB_SIZE];  //lines
  wxterm_line_buffer *next;          //next part of buffer
};

struct wxterm_linepos {
  wxterm_line_buffer *buf;  //which line buffer
  int offset;               //offset into line buffer
};



A linepos references a particular line. A line is just a charpos, keeping track of
where the start of the line is, and how long the line is. There are macros to help
navigate this structure as well:

line_of(linepos)        gets line referenced by linepos.
inc_linepos(linepos)    puts linepos to next line
adjust_linepos(linepos) if offset is too large, adjusts linepos so it points to the
			right block.

So, our terminal references the start of the character buffer / line buffer with

  wxterm_char_buffer *term_chars;
  wxterm_line_buffer *term_lines;

and references the current position (where the cursor is) with 

  wxterm_charpos curr_char_pos;
  wxterm_linepos curr_line_pos;

With this, it's easy to retrieve a particular line:

wxterm_linepos wxTerminal::GetLinePosition(int y) 
{
  wxterm_linepos lpos;
  lpos.buf = term_lines;
  lpos.offset = y;
  adjust_linepos(lpos);
  return lpos;
}

Set the offset and adjust the position!


DebugOutputBuffer() can be called to print out the contents 
and properties of the terminal.

back to top