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imgui.cpp
70
imgui.cpp
@ -448,26 +448,46 @@
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It could be an identifier to your OpenGL texture (cast GLuint to void*), a pointer to your custom engine material (cast MyMaterial* to void*), etc.
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At the end of the chain, your renderer takes this void* to cast it back into whatever it needs to select a current texture to render.
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Refer to examples applications, where each renderer (in a imgui_impl_xxxx.cpp file) is treating ImTextureID as a different thing.
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(C++ tip: OpenGL uses integers to identify textures. You can safely store an integer into a void*, just cast it to void*, don't take it's address!)
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// The example OpenGL back-end uses integers to identify textures.
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// You can safely store an integer into a void* by casting it. e.g. (void*)(intptr_t)MY_GL_UINT to cast to void*.
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GLuint my_opengl_texture;
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glGenTextures(1, &my_opengl_texture);
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// [...] load image, render to texture, etc.
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ImGui::Image((void*)(intptr_t)my_opengl_texture, ImVec2(512,512));
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// The example DirectX11 back-end uses ID3D11ShaderResourceView* to identify textures.
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ID3D11ShaderResourceView* my_texture_view;
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device->CreateShaderResourceView(my_texture, &my_shader_resource_view_desc, &my_texture_view);
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ImGui::Image((void*)my_texture_view, ImVec2(512,512));
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To display a custom image/texture within an ImGui window, you may use ImGui::Image(), ImGui::ImageButton(), ImDrawList::AddImage() functions.
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Dear ImGui will generate the geometry and draw calls using the ImTextureID that you passed and which your renderer can use.
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You may call ImGui::ShowMetricsWindow() to explore active draw lists and visualize/understand how the draw data is generated.
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It is your responsibility to get textures uploaded to your GPU.
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Q: How can I have multiple widgets with the same label or without a label?
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Q: I have multiple widgets with the same label, and only the first one works. Why is that?
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A: A primer on labels and the ID Stack...
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- Elements that are typically not clickable, such as Text() items don't need an ID.
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Dear ImGui internally need to uniquely identify UI elements.
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Elements that are typically not clickable (such as calls to the Text functions) don't need an ID.
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Interactive widgets (such as calls to Button buttons) need a unique ID.
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Unique ID are used internally to track active widgets and occasionally associate state to widgets.
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Unique ID are implicitly built from the hash of multiple elements that identify the "path" to the UI element.
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- Interactive widgets require state to be carried over multiple frames (most typically Dear ImGui
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often needs to remember what is the "active" widget). To do so they need a unique ID. Unique ID
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are typically derived from a string label, an integer index or a pointer.
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- Unique ID are often derived from a string label:
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Button("OK"); // Label = "OK", ID = top of id stack + hash of "OK"
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Button("Cancel"); // Label = "Cancel", ID = top of id stack + hash of "Cancel"
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Button("OK"); // Label = "OK", ID = hash of (..., "OK")
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Button("Cancel"); // Label = "Cancel", ID = hash of (..., "Cancel")
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- ID are uniquely scoped within windows, tree nodes, etc. which all pushes to the ID stack. Having
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two buttons labeled "OK" in different windows or different tree locations is fine.
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We used "..." above to signify whatever was already pushed to the ID stack previously:
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Begin("MyWindow");
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Button("OK"); // Label = "OK", ID = hash of ("MyWindow", "OK")
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End();
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- If you have a same ID twice in the same location, you'll have a conflict:
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@ -482,20 +502,22 @@
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This helps solving the simple collision cases when you know e.g. at compilation time which items
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are going to be created:
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Button("Play"); // Label = "Play", ID = top of id stack + hash of "Play"
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Button("Play##foo1"); // Label = "Play", ID = top of id stack + hash of "Play##foo1" (different from above)
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Button("Play##foo2"); // Label = "Play", ID = top of id stack + hash of "Play##foo2" (different from above)
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Begin("MyWindow");
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Button("Play"); // Label = "Play", ID = hash of ("MyWindow", "Play")
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Button("Play##foo1"); // Label = "Play", ID = hash of ("MyWindow", "Play##foo1") // Different from above
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Button("Play##foo2"); // Label = "Play", ID = hash of ("MyWindow", "Play##foo2") // Different from above
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End();
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- If you want to completely hide the label, but still need an ID:
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Checkbox("##On", &b); // Label = "", ID = top of id stack + hash of "##On" (no label!)
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Checkbox("##On", &b); // Label = "", ID = hash of (..., "##On") // No visible label!
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- Occasionally/rarely you might want change a label while preserving a constant ID. This allows
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you to animate labels. For example you may want to include varying information in a window title bar,
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but windows are uniquely identified by their ID. Use "###" to pass a label that isn't part of ID:
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Button("Hello###ID"; // Label = "Hello", ID = top of id stack + hash of "ID"
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Button("World###ID"; // Label = "World", ID = top of id stack + hash of "ID" (same as above)
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Button("Hello###ID"; // Label = "Hello", ID = hash of (..., "ID")
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Button("World###ID"; // Label = "World", ID = hash of (..., "ID") // Same as above, even though the label looks different
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sprintf(buf, "My game (%f FPS)###MyGame", fps);
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Begin(buf); // Variable label, ID = hash of "MyGame"
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@ -507,45 +529,45 @@
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You can push a pointer, a string or an integer value into the ID stack.
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Remember that ID are formed from the concatenation of _everything_ in the ID stack!
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Begin("Window");
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for (int i = 0; i < 100; i++)
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{
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PushID(i);
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Button("Click"); // Label = "Click", ID = top of id stack + hash of integer + hash of "Click"
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PushID(i); // Push i to the id tack
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Button("Click"); // Label = "Click", ID = Hash of ("Window", i, "Click")
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PopID();
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}
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for (int i = 0; i < 100; i++)
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{
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MyObject* obj = Objects[i];
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PushID(obj);
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Button("Click"); // Label = "Click", ID = top of id stack + hash of pointer + hash of "Click"
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Button("Click"); // Label = "Click", ID = Hash of ("Window", obj pointer, "Click")
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PopID();
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}
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for (int i = 0; i < 100; i++)
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{
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MyObject* obj = Objects[i];
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PushID(obj->Name);
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Button("Click"); // Label = "Click", ID = top of id stack + hash of string + hash of "Click"
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Button("Click"); // Label = "Click", ID = Hash of ("Window", obj->Name, "Click")
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PopID();
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}
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End();
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- More example showing that you can stack multiple prefixes into the ID stack:
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Button("Click"); // Label = "Click", ID = top of id stack + hash of "Click"
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Button("Click"); // Label = "Click", ID = hash of (..., "Click")
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PushID("node");
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Button("Click"); // Label = "Click", ID = top of id stack + hash of "node" + hash of "Click"
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Button("Click"); // Label = "Click", ID = hash of (..., "node", "Click")
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PushID(my_ptr);
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Button("Click"); // Label = "Click", ID = top of id stack + hash of "node" + hash of ptr + hash of "Click"
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Button("Click"); // Label = "Click", ID = hash of (..., "node", my_ptr, "Click")
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PopID();
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PopID();
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- Tree nodes implicitly creates a scope for you by calling PushID().
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Button("Click"); // Label = "Click", ID = top of id stack + hash of "Click"
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Button("Click"); // Label = "Click", ID = hash of (..., "Click")
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if (TreeNode("node"))
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{
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Button("Click"); // Label = "Click", ID = top of id stack + hash of "node" + hash of "Click"
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Button("Click"); // Label = "Click", ID = hash of (..., "node", "Click")
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TreePop();
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}
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@ -70,7 +70,7 @@ In this document:
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FONTS LOADING INSTRUCTIONS
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---------------------------------------
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Load default font with:
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Load default font:
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ImGuiIO& io = ImGui::GetIO();
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io.Fonts->AddFontDefault();
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@ -78,15 +78,22 @@ In this document:
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Load .TTF/.OTF file with:
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ImGuiIO& io = ImGui::GetIO();
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io.Fonts->AddFontFromFileTTF("font.ttf", size_pixels);
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ImFont* font1 = io.Fonts->AddFontFromFileTTF("font.ttf", size_pixels);
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ImFont* font2 = io.Fonts->AddFontFromFileTTF("anotherfont.otf", size_pixels);
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For advanced options create a ImFontConfig structure and pass it to the AddFont function (it will be copied internally)
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// Select font at runtime
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ImGui::Text("Hello"); // use the default font (which is the first loaded font)
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ImGui::PushFont(font2);
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ImGui::Text("Hello with another font");
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ImGui::PopFont();
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For advanced options create a ImFontConfig structure and pass it to the AddFont function (it will be copied internally):
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ImFontConfig config;
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config.OversampleH = 3;
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config.OversampleV = 1;
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config.GlyphExtraSpacing.x = 1.0f;
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io.Fonts->AddFontFromFileTTF("font.ttf", size_pixels, &config);
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ImFont* font = io.Fonts->AddFontFromFileTTF("font.ttf", size_pixels, &config);
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If you have very large number of glyphs or multiple fonts:
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@ -99,7 +106,7 @@ In this document:
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Combine two fonts into one:
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// Load a first font
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io.Fonts->AddFontDefault();
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ImFont* font = io.Fonts->AddFontDefault();
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// Add character ranges and merge into the previous font
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// The ranges array is not copied by the AddFont* functions and is used lazily
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@ -144,7 +151,7 @@ In this document:
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---------------------------------------
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You can use the ImFontAtlas::GlyphRangesBuilder helper to create glyph ranges based on text input.
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For exemple: for a game where your script is known, if you can feed your entire script to it and only build the characters the game needs.
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For example: for a game where your script is known, if you can feed your entire script to it and only build the characters the game needs.
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ImVector<ImWchar> ranges;
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ImFontAtlas::GlyphRangesBuilder builder;
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