On Fri, 6 Sep 2024 17:09:31 GMT, Michael Strauß <mstra...@openjdk.org> wrote:
>> This PR completes the CSS Transitions story (see #870) by adding >> interpolation support for backgrounds and borders, making them targetable by >> transitions. >> >> `Background` and `Border` objects are deeply immutable, but not >> interpolatable. Consider the following `Background`, which describes the >> background of a `Region`: >> >> >> Background { >> fills = [ >> BackgroundFill { >> fill = Color.RED >> } >> ] >> } >> >> >> Since backgrounds are deeply immutable, changing the region's background to >> another color requires the construction of a new `Background`, containing a >> new `BackgroundFill`, containing the new `Color`. >> >> Animating the background color using a CSS transition therefore requires the >> entire Background object graph to be interpolatable in order to generate >> intermediate backgrounds. >> >> More specifically, the following types will now implement `Interpolatable`. >> >> - `Insets` >> - `Background` >> - `BackgroundFill` >> - `BackgroundImage` >> - `BackgroundPosition` >> - `BackgroundSize` >> - `Border` >> - `BorderImage` >> - `BorderStroke` >> - `BorderWidths` >> - `CornerRadii` >> - `Stop` >> - `Paint` and all of its subclasses >> - `Margins` (internal type) >> - `BorderImageSlices` (internal type) >> >> ## Interpolation of composite objects >> >> As of now, only `Color`, `Point2D`, and `Point3D` are interpolatable. Each >> of these classes is an aggregate of `double` values, which are combined >> using linear interpolation. However, many of the new interpolatable classes >> comprise of not only `double` values, but a whole range of other types. This >> requires us to more precisely define what we mean by "interpolation". >> >> Mirroring the CSS specification, the `Interpolatable` interface defines >> several types of component interpolation: >> >> | Interpolation type | Description | >> |---|---| >> | default | Component types that implement `Interpolatable` are interpolated >> by calling the `interpolate(Object, double)}` method. | >> | linear | Two components are combined by linear interpolation such that `t >> = 0` produces the start value, and `t = 1` produces the end value. This >> interpolation type is usually applicable for numeric components. | >> | discrete | If two components cannot be meaningfully combined, the >> intermediate component value is equal to the start value for `t < 0.5` and >> equal to the end value for `t >= 0.5`. | >> | pairwise | Two lists are combined by pairwise interpolation. If the start >> list has fewer elements than the target list, the... > > Michael Strauß has updated the pull request incrementally with one additional > commit since the last revision: > > fixed a bug when null values require discrete transitions ^^ please disregard - this might have been some stale object remaining in eclipse, despite relaunching it, cleaning, etc. etc. had to manually modify the DnDPage.java and then revert it for the thing to work. Sorry for the noise. ------------- PR Comment: https://git.openjdk.org/jfx/pull/1522#issuecomment-2334929217