Commit Graph

10 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Lukas Toenne
81ba62e1e9 Fix for node menu: Show the group input/output nodes in the Input/Output categories respectively, so they can be added with the usual UI in case the user deletes them. These nodes are polled out for
non-group trees (node trees not in the bpy.data.node_groups collection) to avoid confusion. For that purpose a new optional poll function argument has been added to NodeItem, which allows selectively
polling individual items in an otherwise static list.
2013-05-28 09:45:34 +00:00
Campbell Barton
675f845116 use standard name for operator properties - 'props'. 2013-05-09 13:05:36 +00:00
Lukas Toenne
56485b6562 Upgrade for the add_search node operator. This now uses the same basic system as the regular add_node operator, with enum items generated from the common node categories system (nodeitems_utils module). This means that any node listed in the regular node Add menu can now also be added via searching, including node groups and the like. The search operator also uses the subsequent transform to make insertion a bit more streamlined. 2013-05-09 11:43:48 +00:00
Lukas Toenne
8863222a90 A bit more pythonic way of using the items callback in node categories. The category.items attribute is now a function taking a context parameter instead of a property. This can be used for checking validity, e.g. for doing node group recursion checks, and filter out unusable items. 2013-05-08 15:41:05 +00:00
Bastien Montagne
95271e248a One-liner fix for part of regression of nodes UI translation (since new pynodes): add menu entries are translated again.
The sockets' names remain untranslated currently, investigating whether this can safely be fixed at this stage too...
2013-05-03 12:37:45 +00:00
Lukas Toenne
d56ceaab4c Nicer registration mechanism for node categories. The lists of node categories and items are now stored in a dictionary with an identifier key, so they can be registered and unregistered individually. The Add menu is now persistent and gets extended with a draw function for each of the registered node category lists.
This allows pynodes to define their own list of node categories and items and register it at runtime without interfering with the standard nodes.
2013-04-22 16:25:35 +00:00
Lukas Toenne
bb1b2529a0 Added back the basic Search operator to the node Add menu. This operator should be implemented a bit nicer using the new categories system as well, but for now works just as before. 2013-04-17 07:47:00 +00:00
Thomas Dinges
e04b7dc209 Node Toolbar:
* Use column() layout, this way it uses a bit less space.
2013-04-14 09:17:03 +00:00
Thomas Dinges
ceacf24e3d Node Toolbar:
* Have panels closed by default.
2013-04-13 16:26:55 +00:00
Lukas Toenne
94931f9f45 Replacing the node Add menu and making the toolbar useful
As some people have already noticed, the "Add" menu for nodes is a bit messy since pynodes merge. The reason for this is that the order of nodes in submenus (categories) was previously defined by the order in which all nodes are registered (at the bottom of blenkernel/intern/node.c). For the dynamic registration of node types now possible this system of defining node order along with registration is no longer viable: while it would still sort of work for C nodes, it is completely meaningless for dynamic (python) nodes, which are basically registered automatically in whatever order modules and addons are loaded, with the added complexity of unloading and reloading.

To fix this problem and add a bunch of desirable features this commit replaces the C menu with a python implementation. The new menu does not rely on any particular order of types in the node registry, but instead uses a simple explicit list of all the available nodes, grouped by categories (in scripts/nodeitems_builtins.py).

There are a number of additional features that become possible with this implementation:

1) Node Toolbar can be populated!
The list of nodes is used to create 2 UI items for each node: 1 entry in a submenu of "Add" menu and 1 item in a node toolbar panel with basically the same functionality. Clicking a button in the toolbar will add a new node of this type, just like selecting an item in the menu. The toolbar has the advantage of having collapsible panels for each category, so users can decide if they don't need certain nodes categories and have the rest more easily accessible.

2) Each node item is a true operator call.
The old Add menu is a pretty old piece of C code which doesn't even use proper operator buttons. Now there is a generic node_add operator which can be used very flexibly for adding any of the available nodes.

3) Node Items support additional settings.
Each "NodeItem" consists of the basic node type plus an optional list of initial settings that shall be applied to a new instance. This gives additional flexibility for creating variants of the same node or for defining preferred initial settings. E.g. it has been requested to disable previews for all nodes except inputs, this would be simple change in the py code and much less intrusive than in C.

4) Node items can be generated with a function.
A callback can be used in any category instead of the fixed list, which generates a set of items based on the context (much like dynamic enum items in bpy.props). Originally this was implemented for group nodes, because these nodes only make sense when linked to a node tree from the library data. This principle could come in handy for a number of other nodes, e.g. Image nodes could provide a similar list of node variants based on images in the library - no need to first add node, then select an image.

WARNING: pynodes scripters will have to rework their "draw_add_menu" callback in node tree types, this has been removed now! It was already pretty redundant, since one can add draw functions to the Add menu just like for any other menu. In the future i'd like to improve the categories system further so scripters can use it for custom node systems too, for now just make a draw callback and attach it to the Add menu.
2013-04-13 15:38:02 +00:00